Startup error
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- Garry Russell
- The Ministry
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- Location: On the other side of the wall
- Garry Russell
- The Ministry
- Posts: 27180
- Joined: 29 Jan 2005, 00:53
- Location: On the other side of the wall
- Charlie Bravo
- Concorde
- Posts: 1109
- Joined: 27 Jun 2004, 12:03
- Location: STN/EGSS
Evening all !
Sounds like your CPU fan. Do you have an AMD processor? They have an option called "cool n quiet" which slows the fan down when the cpu is cooler in a bid to reduce noise.
Now the weather is getting cooler, the fan may have slowed down to below the limit set in the BIOS and therefore triggered the alarm.
If this is the case, you can either turn cool n quiet off or raise the alarm level in the BIOS.
Sounds like your CPU fan. Do you have an AMD processor? They have an option called "cool n quiet" which slows the fan down when the cpu is cooler in a bid to reduce noise.
Now the weather is getting cooler, the fan may have slowed down to below the limit set in the BIOS and therefore triggered the alarm.
If this is the case, you can either turn cool n quiet off or raise the alarm level in the BIOS.
A bird in the hand will probably sh!t on your wrist.
- Garry Russell
- The Ministry
- Posts: 27180
- Joined: 29 Jan 2005, 00:53
- Location: On the other side of the wall
CB
Garry says the Northbridge fan was stopped - various web sites indicate the error message refers to that fan not the CPU fan.
Garry,
Amazing to identify your make of motherboard by the error :sad: Looks like a bad batch of fans. I agree with DaveB to get it fixed under warranty.
It needs replacing if it is noisy. You could do it your self, but it is fiddly, would cost you something and sourcing the fan might be tricky. I replaced my noisy failing fan on a Gigabyte board with a Zalman silent cooler.
Ian
Garry says the Northbridge fan was stopped - various web sites indicate the error message refers to that fan not the CPU fan.
Garry,
Amazing to identify your make of motherboard by the error :sad: Looks like a bad batch of fans. I agree with DaveB to get it fixed under warranty.
It needs replacing if it is noisy. You could do it your self, but it is fiddly, would cost you something and sourcing the fan might be tricky. I replaced my noisy failing fan on a Gigabyte board with a Zalman silent cooler.
Ian
- Garry Russell
- The Ministry
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- Joined: 29 Jan 2005, 00:53
- Location: On the other side of the wall
I will give them a ring tomorrow Ian
I won't try to run it in the meantime just in case
Take it from there
Thaks for all your help and to the others that chipped in
If this happens in the future I will no what is what.
That same fan went on this machine after 18 months....but all I knew was what the repair sheet said, I just looked.
So I doubt if it will be a suprise to them as this seems common!
Garry
I won't try to run it in the meantime just in case
Take it from there
Thaks for all your help and to the others that chipped in
If this happens in the future I will no what is what.
That same fan went on this machine after 18 months....but all I knew was what the repair sheet said, I just looked.
So I doubt if it will be a suprise to them as this seems common!
Garry
Garry

"In the world of virtual reality things are not always what they seem."

"In the world of virtual reality things are not always what they seem."
- Charlie Bravo
- Concorde
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- Joined: 27 Jun 2004, 12:03
- Location: STN/EGSS
Ah sorry chaps, I've been up since 0345 this morning :redface:
Asus fans aren't too great and I have read of many Asus chipset fans going U/S. Contact the place where it was purchased or contact Asus direct and they will send out a new one.
Changing a chipset fan requires the removal of the motherboard though.
Asus fans aren't too great and I have read of many Asus chipset fans going U/S. Contact the place where it was purchased or contact Asus direct and they will send out a new one.
Changing a chipset fan requires the removal of the motherboard though.
A bird in the hand will probably sh!t on your wrist.
- Garry Russell
- The Ministry
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- DaveB
- The Ministry
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CB wrote..
I'm glad in a way I no longer keep my finger on the pulse as I doubt I'd buy anything
Must be bad luck with the fan Garry as I run 3 Asus boards here.. two of which are well over 2years old and the other at least 18months. There IS time though!! :shock:
ATB
DaveB :tab:
Certainly not the case with Gigabyte boards Chris (the last and only one I've ever had to change). The fan screwed on to the top of the chip.. easy peasyChanging a chipset fan requires the removal of the motherboard though.

Must be bad luck with the fan Garry as I run 3 Asus boards here.. two of which are well over 2years old and the other at least 18months. There IS time though!! :shock:
ATB
DaveB :tab:


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