Armed with courage from previous repair and knowledge, I tackle this trainwreck after (almost) 5 months.
Corrected the mainboard model in the opening post (it is actually A7V8X-X, not A7N8X-X).
I bought this board with a Athlon CPU which was supported. Sadly it was completely dead (no POST execution on any supported mainboards nor cracks in the die). I think the cause for this could be a bad PSU the previous owner used. It may had a bad power rail which started to damage components, resulting in whatever this issue is.
The "memory error" POST code is 9F, which there's no info about it for AWARD bios'es. On PC speaker I get long beeps which go on forever (indicating memory error). What's odd is that the board goes directly to 9F regardless if there's memory inserted.
Already tried to update the BIOS from 1006 to 1013 but to no avail.
grjr wrote on 2025-06-08, 01:27:You've got a good CR2032 battery installed I assume?
Yes (even tried to use my benchtop PSU set to 3.2V), but it doesn't change anything.
Ozzuneoj wrote on 2025-06-08, 02:00:It's possible you're still dealing with bad caps, even if they aren't visibly damaged or swollen. […]
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It's possible you're still dealing with bad caps, even if they aren't visibly damaged or swollen.
They can create some really crazy problems, and the nature of caps charging\discharging means that the problems can be intermittent or seem to change when you do unrelated things.
Just a thought.
Oh... have you tried different power supplies? Preferably totally different models.
Maybe bad caps near the RAM slots, those could only cause the 9F POST code issue. Or it's the chipset being half-dead.
I already tried 3 different PSUs, all known good so those shouldn't be an issue.
My primary suspect for the whole power shenanigans would be the SIO since is responsible for power on/off and fan stuff. My MS-7448 had a similar issue. It was turning on automatically on after applying power and powering on/off rapidly. The issue was a bad SIO which I've since swapped.
As for the RAM errors, I have three suspects.
First is the SIO somehow making all this mess.
Second is the chipset being half-dead as it is responsible for RAM connectivity. Already tried to heat it up with a hot-air gun, but that didn't change anything.
Third, as Ozzuneoj said, bad caps. The ones near the DIMM slots aren't of the highest quality, so these would be the primary suspect.
Attaching photos of the current state of the mainboard.
Any ideas?
"All my efforts were in vain...
Let that be my disappointment."
-Kotel