First post, by nathanieltolbert
I am still working on the ASUS K7M but I made the mistake of bidding on a lot of motherboards with 2 socket 7 and 2 socket 3 motherboards. They arrived, and 1 of each socket type works great and the other doesn't. On the Socket 3 board I get a post code beep that is strange. I'm sure it has a meaning, but I don't know what it is. I have ordered one of the Post Code cards so I can see the specific hex code for where it's failing, but it won't be here for a bit.
The board in question is a Young Micro Systems CROSS 486G-VLB. The Varta battery was removed before I got it. There was a bit of corrosion on the top of the board, but none visible on the bottom of the board. That's not to say that the board is damage free though. It's pretty clear that this board was treated roughly at least once before coming to me. On the back in an area that looks like a ground plane there is a massive gouge, but it doesn't appear to reach any of the pins nor does it go completely from one side of the plane to the other, so there doesn't appear to be a break in the plane. There is also what appears to be damaged plastic on the VLB slots and at least one of the ISA slots. Once I get my battery replaced in my multimeter again I will test for continuity. The other thing I immediately noticed was the metal arms that hold the 72 pin simms in place were very clearly bent out of shape on Bank 0 and Bank 1. I bent them back, but there is a part on Bank 0 I wasn't able to bend back as it was curled in on itself and I worry that I may break it off if I force it. And the last thing I noticed after all of that is that it appears that one corner of the socket is lower than the other three corners? The keyed corner, when the CPU is flat in the socket appears to be maybe 1 or 2 mm lower, which results in the pins being exposed in that corner. I have never seen this before, and maybe that's the problem?
After checking the board over visually I inserted two 8MB simms in Bank 0 and Bank 1. Plugged in the AT power, and an ISA Video card. pressed the button. I got a strange post code beep. For 4 seconds there is nothing. Then the speaker emits a 1 second low tone beep, there is a pause of 3 seconds, then another 1 second low tone beep, followed by another 3 second pause and then 1 second low tone beep. After that there is a 10 second pause and the pattern repeats itself. I checked all of the jumpers as this board has a ton of factory set do not change. Several of them were changed. I set the back to factory default. No change. I have taken some pictures of the board, and I will post them. When I flipped the board over, I noticed more damage. I fear there are half a dozen small traces that were gouged from this board at the very least being stored on top of another board. I apologize for coming here so constantly. I hope to have the post code card by Saturday and hopefully that will help me. Thank you for any questions or suggestions on what to test to see if I can get this board running. I will pick up a battery for my multimeter after I get my daughter from school so I can test continuity.
-Edit- I got the system analyzer card. When plugged in, the machine hangs on D3. I couldn't find anything initially regarding this, until I found a manual inside of the box. It indicated that for AMIBIOS that D3 indicates Memory Sizing. So I am going to guess, that this means that it cannot find the RAM. I cannot at this point ID if this is because of damaged traces on the bottom of the board, or if it's because RAM I think is FPM is actually EDO, and won't work with this board. If anyone knows anything more about this board, I would really appreciate the help. If I can get it to fully post then I can make a dump of the BIOS for The Retro Web and any additional items that the site might need regarding the board.