VOGONS


First post, by revolstar

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So, my motherboard is the Gigabyte GA-7VT600. From time to time (and recently very often) I get the 'CMOS error, defaults loaded' message when booting up. I've tried swapping out the CR2032 battery (tried 3 brands: Energizer, Varta, and Grundig), but that doesn't seem to be a long lasting solution. The caps look OK, no signs of leekage or bulging. Any ideas you guys? 😕

Win98 rig: Athlon XP 2500+/512MB RAM/Gigabyte GA-7VT600/SB Audigy/GF FX5700/Voodoo2 12MB
WinXP rig: HP RP5800 - Pentium G850/2GB RAM/GF GT530 1GB
Amiga: A600/2MB RAM
PS3: Slim, CFW
PS2: Fat, FMCB
Dreamcast, GDEMU

Reply 1 of 5, by bogdanpaulb

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Did you actuality measured the trace with v+ vs the board gnd , coming from the battery holder to make sure you have ~3v ? I had cases with broken/oxidized traces or oxidized parts so even there was a new battery in the holder , i didn't had any voltage from it on the motherboard .

Reply 2 of 5, by konc

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bogdanpaulb wrote on 2023-03-17, 13:34:

Did you actuality measured the trace with v+ vs the board gnd , coming from the battery holder to make sure you have ~3v ? I had cases with broken/oxidized traces or oxidized parts so even there was a new battery in the holder , i didn't had any voltage from it on the motherboard .

This, also reseat the chip in case it isn't always making proper contact due to pins oxidation.

Reply 3 of 5, by revolstar

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Will check that out, as I've only measured the batteries themselves. Thanks!

Win98 rig: Athlon XP 2500+/512MB RAM/Gigabyte GA-7VT600/SB Audigy/GF FX5700/Voodoo2 12MB
WinXP rig: HP RP5800 - Pentium G850/2GB RAM/GF GT530 1GB
Amiga: A600/2MB RAM
PS3: Slim, CFW
PS2: Fat, FMCB
Dreamcast, GDEMU

Reply 4 of 5, by bogdanpaulb

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You can check also the voltage at the clr cmos jumper , you should have around ~2.7v when is in the normal position .

Reply 5 of 5, by Repo Man11

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Years ago I built an AT Super 7 system out of parts I had lying around to give to my aunt. Every time I would move the case, it would clear the CMOS memory, and I didn't understand why. So long as it was stationary there was no problem. After upgrading her to something better, I took it apart and realized that I had missed that there was a standoff in the case that did not match up with a screw hole; when you would move the case the motherboard would ground and clear the CMOS.

After watching many YouTube videos about older computer hardware, YouTube began recommending videos about trains - are they trying to tell me something?