Yeah, it's in a bad position to work on and the bench is buried in 2 other dismembered corpses, so I poke at it a bit, get pisse […]
Show full quote
Yeah, it's in a bad position to work on and the bench is buried in 2 other dismembered corpses, so I poke at it a bit, get pissed off and stiff and leave it alone again before I klutz something or deliberately maim it. Otherwise as you say, thorough work up would take just a couple of hours. Think I gotta find the inspection mirror, as the PCI slot is too close to the bottom to see a POST card display. Though it was cycling quick enough before that I dunno if that will show anything useful yet. Is making me a bit unreasonably grumpy though, it's interrupting the "fun stuff to mess around with" by being a chore, and also because it was filling some tweener support roles, so I can't forget about it for a bit, because I go "I just need a file from.." "I just need to make a disk on.." AAAAARRRRGH stupid shitty shitbox that died for no sensible fricking reason. Yeah there's other ways to do that, got the files on other machines etc, but just from being the "go to" it keeps coming to mind and doesn't let me calm down about it 🤣
Evening Edit: Had another attempt... had CPU and RAM out, hosed with contact cleaner, pulled plugs, nothing. Checked batt, voltage was down under 3, fresh batt in case, no improvement/change. Noticed CPU fan pulsing a bit, that seems consistent with it resetting over and over though. Put a USB stick on it, no attempt to read, so it's not looking to bootblock recover. Realised case didn't have a speaker, the header plugs didn't include it, and put a speaker on, but no beeps anyway. Checked PSU voltages, all look good. Tried different RAM sticks different slots, nope. So it is seeming like it's gotta be a full bench workup, checking for clock to CPU and core voltages etc etc, all the nitty gritty, and fine tooth comb inspection for hairline cracks and dodgy solder. Great, practically another project. Maybe this PSU just sliiiightly too marginal for fussy board and it's flipping out on a real small voltage variation, but IDK. Also might suspect one or two of the "poly" caps, they haven't got the flattest flat tops, but they also ain't bulgy bulged, just real slightly convex.
However, cluttering up the bench is a FM2 board I was still investigating, mATX, so might divert efforts to that, see if that can be got going, then put that in that system, and go back to this stupid damn thing when I got more patience for Asus BS.
editII: it was this one if you are curious, appears to have more life in it than Asus at the moment. Re: Bought this (Modern) hardware today though I just realised I can't hook the LS-120 to it, boooo.
edit yet again: so I am seeing similar models to this Asus board listed for parts/spares or repair with burned aux 12V sockets... like it's a common design flaw or cheap socket problem, so guess I better take a close look at that just in case.
edits that never stop: Fifth thoughts, it might get my DG965SS in it with a SLACR native floppy controller, PATA, better for purpose prolly.
Sun edit: I poked at the 4 pin aux ATX 12V again, actually seems a little wobbly, not sure if it's just the shell loose. Anyway, when I futz with that, the ability to turn off on the button comes back. Hanging the DVM on the 12V2 seems to see it waver a bit also. Maybe this PSU ain't so good either, reviews from way back say it might be a bit weak in the 12V department. Maybe I should try diff PSU... hard to get one close where it is tho...