T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2922.1 | | WRKSYS::INGRAHAM | Andy | Mon Feb 17 1997 10:32 | 4 |
| Instead of "capacitor", substitute "battery".
Need more info to get an idea what's wrong. There are many other
possibilities if it "breaks" within the first day.
|
2922.2 | check the Ni-Cad battery | CONSLT::ARDUINO | | Mon Feb 17 1997 10:32 | 12 |
| The 386's and 486's I've worked on have an internal re-chargeable
battery that keeps the BIOS settings when the PC is in the OFF state.
If I remember, on most MB the battery is close to the keyboard
connector in the rear of the MB. The voltage is about 3.6-3.9V Ni-Cad
battery. If the new MB has been sitting around, its a good chance
that the battery has grown chemical whiskers (internal shorts) that
prevent the battery from being charged, by the internal charging
circuit. You can check the "hobby" notefiles on how to use a very large
capacitor to repair the Ni-Cad battery or replace it with a NEW one.
//John
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2922.3 | | skylab.zko.dec.com::FISHER | Gravity: Not just a good idea. It's the law! | Mon Feb 17 1997 12:15 | 4 |
| You might have a jumper set wrong too. There is sometimes a jumper to select
whether to use the "soldered on" battery or an external one.
Burns
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2922.4 | | BBQ::WOODWARDC | ...but words can break my heart | Mon Feb 17 1997 16:40 | 25 |
| Thanks guys,
yes, the 'blue "battery"' is what I was looking at. It didn't look like
a "traditional ;')" battery, so I thus assumed it was a capacitor -
whatever, I knew it stored electricity for the thing to remember what
the heck it was ;')
Ok, my first thing will be to power the system up, and leave it running
for an extended time, just to try and ensure the battery is charged.
What made (makes) me suspect something other than this, was that the
other m/b (the 386) had a very similar device (similar ratings on the
side) and the losing the settings was why I invested in the 486 m/b.
For both to fail in a similar way thus made me suspect something else.
Anyway, I'm just starting for the day (Oz), so I'll be doing some
searching on 'PX486DX33/P50' with AMI BIOS - and see what I can come up
with.
re: another battery - hmmm - nothing "obvious" on the m/b - but
hopefully a search will reveal some more info - thanks for the
direction given
H
|
2922.5 | | BBQ::WOODWARDC | ...but words can break my heart | Tue Feb 18 1997 04:41 | 22 |
| Me again,
I just put the multimeter across the blue battery on the 386 motherboard
- barely registered in the tens of millivolts.
Pulled the battery from the old 286 motherboard (the pc started as a
286/12, 'grew' to a 386/16, and is now 486/40), which was removed some
2 years ago now, and it still has something over 1 volt in it!
Assuming that leaving the 486 running all night does not recharge the
existing battery, my plan is, tomorrow night, to solder wires from this
battery to the appropriate terminals on the existing battery on the
motherboard, and attach the 'new' battery with hook-and-loop tape to
the case somewhere nearby.
Can anybody see a problem with having this "new" battery basically in
parallel with the existing (presumably dead) battery? There is, of
course, the caveat that the 'new' second-hand battery will die sometime
soon ;'), but casting that aside, are there any known problems with
this?
H
|
2922.6 | disconnect old battery.. | KISMIF::KISMIF::JEMIOLO | | Tue Feb 18 1997 07:24 | 10 |
| re-1
Do not put the batteries in parallel, The stronger battery will
discharge through the weaker one, (Anyone remember kirkof's(sp) laws on
current flow).. cut or unsolder the old one out of the circuit.
Most motherboards have a connector for an external battery, check your
motherboard doc's
jj
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2922.7 | | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Tue Feb 18 1997 08:09 | 6 |
| re .6:
�(Anyone remember kirkof's(sp) laws on
Kirchhoff.
|
2922.8 | | WRKSYS::INGRAHAM | Andy | Tue Feb 18 1997 09:49 | 9 |
| Re: Don't do it ...
Especially true if the old battery died by developing internal shorts
(fairly likely).
However you add the new one (best to use a connector if your board has one
and move the jumper to enable it), measure the battery's voltage before and
after connection. If there's much change, assume there's something still
wrong with the board.
|
2922.9 | | COOKIE::FROEHLIN | Let's RAID the Internet! | Tue Feb 18 1997 15:02 | 8 |
| When you shutdown the system, press the reset and go into your BIOS
setup page. Are all parameters still there? Now power it off.
Just to make sure that when you power off we have indeed a valid
setting in the CMOS. If the CMOS setting is gone before powering it
off maybe a program causes this.
Guenther
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2922.10 | Don't solder/snip if possible | skylab.zko.dec.com::FISHER | Gravity: Not just a good idea. It's the law! | Tue Feb 18 1997 16:12 | 10 |
| Assuming you take the advice to use the external battery connector and
jumper (which I agree with), you may not be able to use the old
rechargable battery there. I think those external connectors are
usually for long-life non-rechargables, and thus would not have the
recharge current there. Hopefully you have the motherboard docs to
check this out... Assuming the battery you have there does not charge,
do double-check the internal/external battery jumper position. That
might explain it not charging also.
Burns
|
2922.11 | | BBQ::WOODWARDC | ...but words can break my heart | Tue Feb 18 1997 17:12 | 18 |
| Hullo,
gee, am I *glad* I asked ;')
No, no doc's - second hand M/b from a dealer who specialises in
upgrading people's machines with new m/b's and keeps the old one as a
'trade-in'.
Ok, looks like the best I should do is go and buy a brand new battery,
desolder the one already there, and put the new one in. Good thing I
have most of the 'anti-stat' gear I need to do this ;')
Last night I checked the notes in here on "batt"eries (dir/titl=batt)
and read through them. I luv notes :')
Again, much thanks for the help.
H
|
2922.12 | | WRKSYS::INGRAHAM | Andy | Wed Feb 19 1997 07:54 | 10 |
| The manuals for my motherboards show a jumper to select the battery's
voltage range ... mine talk about two different voltage ranges.
It seems risky to replace the battery when you don't know which voltage
to use.
I don't know ... but I'm less likely to pin it on a dead battery so soon,
on a new motherboard. It could be just that the voltage jumper is in the
wrong position and the battery isn't charging. Or maybe another problem
entirely.
|
2922.13 | There's an implied performance of function in your purchase.. | NETCAD::BATTERSBY | | Wed Feb 19 1997 09:22 | 15 |
| Seems to me that there is an implied warranty from the dealer
you bought this motherboard from. Take it back to them and
ask them to verify that the motherboard functions as you bought
it. Tell them what you observed upon arriving home after leaving their
store. Also tell them that you don't intend to pay them to diagnose
something that should be implied in the sale of that hardware.
That is, that for some reasonable amount of time it should function
as a functioning motherboard should function, and that you shouldn't
be seeing this problm for something so recently bought. If they won't
diagnose this motherboard without charging you, then ask them for a
replacement, otherwise you will be forced to write a certified letter
to your State's Consumer Affairs Office complaining of their business
practices.
Bob
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2922.14 | This is a komput�r and not a simple flashlight! | COOKIE::FROEHLIN | Let's RAID the Internet! | Wed Feb 19 1997 16:18 | 15 |
| .0> BIOS forgets its' stuff. My first thought was that the capacitor on the
What does this mean in technical language? The system didn't boot
because of message blabla? The BIOS page showed no or nonsense entries?
Or...?
.0> wonderfully. Today I get a call, "it's broken". Sounds suspiciously
A call? So you don't have experienced this yourself? Anything more
specific than "it's broken"?
I doubt that your problem has anything close to do with the CMOS
battery given close to zero information on the symptom.
Guenther
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2922.15 | | BBQ::WOODWARDC | ...but words can break my heart | Wed Feb 19 1997 22:25 | 60 |
| ok,
first, some background. This box was a 286, I upgraded a couple of
years ago to a 386, and last weekend to a 486. In the meantime my wife
has bought a P90, and I have a DECpc MTE d2/466 (yay!).
This machine (with the problems) is one we have given to my Father in
Law to repalce his XT clone that has just died (the hard disk has
irretrievably failed - I grabbed backups a week before it failed ;')
I have observed the problems, and because I work for a computer company,
therefore I know something about computers ;') Having replaced the
motherboard in this box twice now, I know a little - very little.
The major symptoms are:
1 - power on system for first time for the day, error message ensues
"BIOS [or is it CMOS?] checksum error - press <F1> to continue" which
takes you into the BIOS set up, to enter the disks (both hard and
floppy), date, time, keyboard installed, etc. - I accept defaults
for most of the other settings (e.g. memory and such)
1a - sometimes the date and time is remembered, sometimes the time,
most often nothing at all
2 - exit & save BIOS settings - machine reboots & loads Win95 correctly
3 - work as per normal (wp, games, etc.)
4 - if machine powered down, and then restarted within several hours,
it works as expected (normal boot)
5 - if the machine is restarted after some 10 to 12 hours (or more),
i.e. overnight, or next evening, then it loses the BIOS settings,
and step 1 is repeated
I have checked the battery (located just behind the keyboard connector
on the m/b), with a multimeter and it reads 4.1V (rating on the side is
3.6V but I'm not too worried about that at this time). So, there
appears to be enough voltage. Without desoldering the battery, I can't
really determine the current it is drawing.
I had hoped, that by leaving the machine turned on overnight, the
battery would receive a full charge (it did), and this would solve the
problem. It now appears that the problem is in fact something else
(ain't it always? ;').
I have checked all the socketted chips on the m/b and ensured that they
are properly seated.
I will check the m/b tonight to see if there may be a problem with the
soldering of the onboard battery. I will also be checking the clearance
around the m/b and between cards and the caseing, to verivy that there
is no 'short' happening.
If there is nothing visibly wrong, I will then contact the store, and
see what we can do from there. Thanks again for your ideas.
H
|
2922.16 | | WRKSYS::INGRAHAM | Andy | Thu Feb 20 1997 08:55 | 17 |
| Since you have a multimeter, there are a few other things you can try that
MIGHT give you another clue or two.
What's the battery voltage when it's running, and been running a while?
What's the battery voltage just after turning it off?
What's the battery voltage after being off all night, before turning it on?
I would expect the first to be slightly higher than the other two (due to
charging), but the other two ought to be about the same as one another.
As far as I know, PC power supplies are as good as unplugged when turned
off (i.e., they don't continue to trickle-charge the battery when "off").
Sometimes something other than the battery (like a runaway program) can
cause BIOS corruption, but it does sound like the battery is most likely.
|
2922.17 | Check CMOS Jumper Settings? | DANGER::YEE | | Tue Feb 25 1997 17:25 | 13 |
| Here is a shot in the dark. Could there be a CMOS reset jumper that
came loose on your MB? I had a problem with setting up a CMOS password
setup and got locked out. I had to change the CMOS jumper on my 486 MB
to reset the CMOS information to reboot. I lost the disk(s) setup
information and the BIOS reset to the default setting after I did the
reset. I had to reenter the information.
Reset=move a jumper (J5 in my case) from pins 1-2 to 2-3, power up
and then power down. Move the jumper back from 2-3 to 1-2 and then
reboot. This somehow removes power from the CMOS memory and resets
the contents to the default settings (to no password check, etc).
This might not explain why a second MB does the same thing.
|
2922.18 | the end (?) | BBQ::WOODWARDC | ...but words can break my heart | Wed Feb 26 1997 16:50 | 28 |
| Well,
last weekend, I took the board (in machine and connected up) back to
the shop, and the technician had a quick look, and thought "ah! new
battery" and attached an external battery to the beast. His only caveat
was that he might have got the polarity wrong (!), so I should swap it
around it it doesn't hold the settings :'\
It didn't, and I did. And it still didn't {sigh}. He then suggested I
call the local manufacturer/distributor of the board, which I did.
Unfortuantely, they no longer have the documentation on these "old
boards" (copyright 1993!), they "use only Intel boards now". So I struck
out there as well.
I called the store again, and he agreed to swap the board, which I
installed yesterday, ran for several hours, probed the battery, etc.,
checked jumpers, all that stuff, and it seems to be "ok" today.
No idea what was the fault with the other board was - and it seems that
the technician at the shop doesn't either - so I'll chalk it to "one of
those things". If I had the (a) time, (b) inclination or (c) the test
equipment, I'd probably try and track it down - but as I have none of
the above - and it's no longer my machine anyway (given to my Father in
Law), I will consider this case closed (for the time being).
Thanks for all the help and suggestions.
H
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