First post, by Pickelhaube808
- Rank
- Newbie
A few weeks ago, I bought a PCChips M919 3.4B/F board for $50 that the seller stated was "tested and working". However, after receiving, putting in a known good processor and RAM (Intel 486 DX4 100 + 2 x 32MB EDO), and setting the jumpers to the correct settings (assuming the manual is correct), I get no video, no nothing. At least it seemed to be an honest mistake on the seller's part as he immediately refunded me upon me bringing it up to him.
After pressing the power button, all that happens is that the CPU warms up. Plugging in a speaker results in no beeps, and plugging in a POST card results in no codes. Cards in the ISA and PCI slots do however turn on, so at least they are getting power. Oddly though, the board acts roughly the same whether or not the BIOS chip is inserted.
What I have tried so far:
- Removing and replacing CMOS battery
- Setting the BIOS jumper to 5v/12v/NC
- Using vinegar, then Deoxit, then 99% IPA on corroded connectors
- Soaking the entire board in 99% IPA to remove any grime
- Different combinations of EDO memory in various slots (It SHOULD support EDO, right?)
- Different CPUs (an Intel DX2-50, along with changing the jumpers to reflect it)
- Flashed newest BIOS revision to an SST29EE010 chip
- Checking continuity on some of the traces, all of tested ones had continuity
- Tried ISA and PCI video cards
- Replaced all electrolytic capacitors on the board with high quality Panasonic ones of the same values
- Replaced diodes with new analogs, even though the old ones tested good
- Replaced all transistors and other voltage regulation components on the board with their modern analogs
- Replaced main 14.31818MHz crystal oscillator
What I have not tried so far (but could):
- Replacing any of the tiny SMD components on the board
- Replacing any of the resistors, including resistor arrays/networks
- Reflow or replace larger package chips such as the chipsets or other controllers
- Reflow every single solder joint on the front and back
- Build an M919 cache module (It shouldn't need one to boot, right?)
- Poke around the board with a multimeter or oscope when it's turned on
Considering what I have already tried, I know this is either a hard nut to crack or I am just overlooking something major. Any advice on how to proceed would be greatly appreciated though to revive this awesome board.
Here are some images of what I've got:
The lighting wasn't very good for what I had to work with when I took these, so please let me know if you want to see any particular part of the board so I can get you a closeup image.