First post, by Ozzuneoj
- Rank
- l33t
I recently came into possession of a really fantastic piece of a gear from the time when I was really starting to dive into building and upgrading PCs myself. It's a historically significant CPU from the year 2000 in a very nice motherboard. It all looks to be in great shape except someone at some point did some kind of oddball modification to the PS\2 port and USB port wiring. I probed the connectors with my multimeter to check which pins these are, and if I'm reading the pinouts correctly they've simply connected the +5v pin from the PS/2 KB\M ports to the +5v pin of the USB ports.
What exactly would this DO? What would it accomplish? Is there any likelihood of damage?
All I can guess is either they had no power on the PS/2 ports due to a defect or they were trying to get additional power for some kind of external device (KVM, etc.) that ran off of the PS/2 ports... but I have no clue if that even makes any sense.
It looks like they also dismantled the PS/2 port casing... again, no idea why.
It is an Asus K7V motherboard, and I'd be very surprised if the board wasn't at least turned on like this at some point, so I doubt I'd be doing further damage by running it... but I haven't tested it yet because the only CPU I have to test with is one I don't want to risk damaging.
Anyone have any ideas? Ideally I'd like to get rid of the wire and have the board looking normal again. I have plenty boards I can harvest replacement PS/2 ports (or at least the metal cover) from if necessary.