Results 1 to 11 of 11

Thread: computer guru?

  1. #1
    Member Since
    Jun 2002
    Location
    1999 silver 1346
    Posts
    505
    Thanked: 0

    computer guru?

    for a while now when i reboot my system or start it up ( which i almost never do , i just usually leave it on) I get a hardware monitor error on boot up, when i go into the bios i have a vcore voltatge of 1.36 which is in red, I usually just hit f1 to bypass this, is this bad to do? any ideas why this happens? Do i need a new mother board?

    I have a P4 2.4ghz computer and 512 mb of ram and a asus board i think.

  2. #2
    Member Since
    Jan 2003
    Location
    1999, Ebony Black, 1856
    Posts
    209
    Thanked: 0
    I'd crack the case and get the specs off the motherboard...then go to the asus site and search the boards...

    http://vip.asus.com/forum/topic.aspx...Language=en-us

  3. #3
    Member Since
    Jun 2003
    Location
    visiting your planet, from time to time
    Posts
    211
    Thanked: 0
    Go to intels site and download the processor id utility, then use their processor spec finder to determine the voltage required by your cpu. You may have an impending power supply or mobo voltage regulator problem which could cause data loss or corruption.

  4. #4
    Member Since
    Jun 2002
    Location
    1999 silver 1346
    Posts
    505
    Thanked: 0
    its been like this for about 6 months now , if i didnt have a problem with it so far do you think i will later?

  5. #5
    Member Since
    Jun 2002
    Location
    2001 Ebony S/C #1304
    Posts
    3,647
    Thanked: 10
    Quote Originally Posted by AREA 51 View Post
    Go to intels site and download the processor id utility, then use their processor spec finder to determine the voltage required by your cpu. You may have an impending power supply or mobo voltage regulator problem which could cause data loss or corruption.
    +1

    Ya, step by step it.

    Mobo or power supply, especially considering you dont let the PC rest in the OFF state, heh. Constant power = generated heat + spinning fans/bearings + hot chipsets/silicon = slow but sure dry chipset board/all plastics, burned out fan bearings. At this point, anything goes.

    Plus, constant running machines are sitting ducks for power surges and spikes, depending on the reliability of your backup unit (if there is one).

    I was in the same boat last year. Ended up getting a new mobo AND power supply. Just remember, NewEgg.com is your friend.
    Gary Noonan
    '01 S/C VX / '18 Forester XT

  6. #6
    Member Since
    Jan 2003
    Location
    1999, Ebony, 0797
    Posts
    921
    Thanked: 0
    I used to have those issues all the time with my Dell.

    SO, I bought a Mac.
    :bgwg:
    OEM roof rack, Thule Xpedition 696 rack, Rancho RS9000 shocks, OME 913 coil springs, 3" lift, American Racing Teflon Chambers wheels, Yokohama Geolandar HT/S G051 tires (275/70/16), Energy Suspension greaseable bushings, steel-braided Kevlar-reinforced brake lines, WeatherTech wind deflectors, Malibu 18w driving lights, Plasma SuperWhite 100w headlights, NGK Iridium plugs, K&N drop-in air filter, Optima Red Top, Psychos2 rear-door subwoofer enclosure w/CDT Audio 10" sub, Blaupunkt subwoofer amp, iPod Video 80GB, Kenwood KVT-617 DVD head unit w/7" motorized touch-screen, Kenwood GPS HD navigation module, Kenwood iPod adapter, Kenwood back-up camera, Sirius radio, Flowmaster Extreme Off-Road muffler (black diamond-plate steel) w/ carbon fiber tip, Ford Taurus OEM cup-holder/coin tray (single-DIN/lower bay), personalized license plate "ORBITAL", 3M window tint, debadged, removed rear seat, custom 'radiation symbol' side magnetic signs, VX Concepts front skid plate

  7. #7
    Member Since
    Jun 2002
    Location
    2001 Ebony S/C #1304
    Posts
    3,647
    Thanked: 10
    Quote Originally Posted by PHO2GR4 View Post
    I used to have those issues all the time with my Dell.

    SO, I bought a Mac.
    :bgwg:
    That's the problem.... you bought a Dell.



    "Dude, you bought a Dell! (sucks to be you)!"

    Never buy a pre-built PC. You should know better than that. Always build your own. And by doing so, you can get a power house for a fraction of the price that it takes a corporation to have a sweatshop in Malaysia build for you filled with no name hardware made in China.

  8. #8
    Member Since
    Feb 2007
    Location
    2001 Proton VX #0690
    Posts
    685
    Thanked: 0
    Quote Originally Posted by WormGod View Post
    Never buy a pre-built PC. You should know better than that. Always build your own. And by doing so, you can get a power house for a fraction of the price that it takes a corporation to have a sweatshop in Malaysia build for you filled with no name hardware made in China.
    Well, but then you end up with a beast sitting on your desk that sounds like an idling Harrier. I'll say this about Dells -- their cases are well designed to be quiet.

    For what it is worth, though, I still couldn't bring myself to buy a Dell. My current machine was purchased with quiet in mind, and except for the stupid northbridge fan, it fits the bill nicely.

    Now, back to the OP: As other people have mentioned, it is probably either the power supply or the voltage regulator on the motherboard. You're probably going to end up replacing one or the other. If you've got an extra power supply, try that first. While you've got the computer open, inspect the capacitors for leaking. Near the CPU, you'll see a lot of can-shapped things that look like batteries. The tops of them should be flat, with no evidence of bulging, and no stuff leaking out of them.

    As WormGod suggested, computers die from heat. Heat usually causes the caps to leak or dry out. In either case, they stop filtering power right, which causes all KINDS of strange symptoms, until one day the machine won't even come on anymore.

    Now, all that said, some people turn up some of the voltages to overclock the computer. I don't know much about that, though... I don't typically overclock, much.

  9. #9
    Member Since
    May 2006
    Location
    SOLD!
    Posts
    7,257
    Thanked: 2
    Quote Originally Posted by PHO2GR4 View Post
    I used to have those issues all the time with my Dell.

    SO, I bought a Mac.
    :bgwg:
    Oh Eric, for shame!

    Bart

  10. #10
    Member Since
    May 2006
    Location
    SOLD!
    Posts
    7,257
    Thanked: 2
    Quote Originally Posted by mdwyer View Post
    Well, but then you end up with a beast sitting on your desk that sounds like an idling Harrier. I'll say this about Dells -- their cases are well designed to be quiet.
    I would agree here, my machine does sound like a Harrier, but I don't mind, since the machine runs good and what not, and I usually can't hear it since I am always playing music and games while at my PC.

    I do not leave my machine on all the time. There are some schools of thought that you should leave your PC on all the time, but I disagree. Would you leave your VX running all the time? To me its like putting extra miles on your computer that you don't need to.

    Bart

  11. #11
    Member Since
    Feb 2006
    Location
    2001,Kaiser Silver, VX, 0563
    Posts
    4,767
    Thanked: 0
    i will vouch for dell.. ive had my dell laptop (inspiron 8500) for 5 years now and never had a single problem with it until 2 weeks ago when the backlight on the monitor went out, that will be fixed soon though. but ive put it through hell, its had billiards balls bounced off the case, even survived an 80mph roll over in which it went out the window and landed on the median of I-95, worked fine after that too

    i also built my home desktop and yea thats much more powerful than my laptop could ever hope to be and only cost me $400 in parts plus a $200 LCD monitor


    "Engineers believe if it ain't broke, it doesn't have enough features yet"

Similar Threads

  1. computer
    By Steven Ng in forum VX Troubleshooting...
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 03/01/2008, 02:35 AM
  2. Guru help needed!
    By gruven in forum VX Troubleshooting...
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 10/09/2007, 08:21 PM
  3. computer in my VX
    By technocoy in forum VX Modifications...
    Replies: 31
    Last Post: 01/14/2006, 06:48 PM
  4. In-car computer
    By FernZ in forum VX Modifications...
    Replies: 12
    Last Post: 05/12/2005, 06:43 AM
  5. 2-Din Computer
    By transio in forum VX Talk...
    Replies: 8
    Last Post: 09/01/2004, 12:01 AM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
$lv_vb_eventforums_eventdetails