MoBo Beeping Crazy

Discussion in 'CPU, Motherboards and Memory' started by Bathael, May 7, 2005.

  1. Bathael

    Bathael Geek Trainee

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    Gigabyte GA-8IK1100 rev1 Motherboard
    Award Bios

    Intel Pentium 4 2.40Ghz (800fsb)
    Processor Runs @ 55˚C

    1Gb PC 3200 Ram running Dual Channel

    Maxtor 8Y120P0 140Gb ATA IDE Drive @ 34˚C
    Maxtor 8Y120M0 140Gb SATA Drive @ 38˚C

    256Mb GeForce FX5500 Graphics Card
    Creative Audigy Sound Card

    Windows XP SP2
    Intel Raid Accelerator

    The system experiences slowdown accompanied by a Beep about once every two seconds, sometimes this beep/system event is accompanied by a glitch or click in the sound of whatever is running at the time. It is not constant under normal circumstances there is no problem, but if I run a game or defrag/search program it starts. It seems to happen no matter which drive is being used.

    I have replaced the graphics card, the processor fan and upgraded the PSU to 550w.
    Tried running without sound card & with alternating Ram Chips
    Upgraded drivers, Installed fans on PCI and Hard Drives.
    Run System Mechanic, O&O Defrag Pro, Active SMART etc all say drives and system are OK. No Spyware or Viruses that I could detect either :O)

    I’ve run out of ideas anyone got any?
    Thanks in advance :eek:)
     
  2. Exfoliate

    Exfoliate Geek Trainee

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    Holy, that must be extremely annoying. I really can't think of anything myself, you did a load of stuff:good:. I take it you updated the bios too when upgraded the drivers? Check all your connections too if you haven't already. What power supply did you get exactly, if it was a total cheapo it's remotely possible that's the problem but I thnk you have a better grasp of the concept than I.
     
  3. zRoCkIsAdDiCtInG

    zRoCkIsAdDiCtInG HWF Guitar Freak

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    yea i agree with ex, and if it doesnt work put your system together all over again and it'll probably stop unless you have a damaged component or faulty drivers (reinstall windows 2)

    but wait for other ppols replies first, thats your worst case scenario

    it can't be memory, i doubt its the Hds... hmmm.. ill think about this one
     
  4. Bathael

    Bathael Geek Trainee

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    Thanks guys,
    Already reinstallled windows and updated the bios to the newest available. But don't stop throwing ideas in, I may well be overlooking something simple. One of those "D'oh" moments
    Taking the system apart is, as you said, my last resort. But since the only thing I gaven't actually removed from the case lately is the mobo itself, I figure unless there's an obvious peice of physical damage to blame, I might still be stuck.
    Here's hoping there's a brainwave out there with my name on it :eek:)

    Bathael
     
  5. bobbyk

    bobbyk Big Geek

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    I think you should take out the mobo, and try it with one board at a time -- video, then sound, then the next --- all outside of the casing. That way you'll at least have a better grasp of what's exactly going on and you've isolated the mobo from tha casing as well. That's what I'd do at this stage... :)
     
  6. Big B

    Big B HWF Godfather

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    There's two possibilities I can think of to look at closely, besides what's been suggested:

    The CPU is getting too hot. Now, if I'm remembering correctly, the P4 will underclock itself, but if there's a glitch there and it's not doing it, you're getting issues. The other thing that might be a problem is that the RAM has a few errors with it, and might be corrected with a slight voltage bump. Download [google]Memtest[/google] and check your RAM with that. Let it run for a couple of hours. If you get errors in any test, up the voltage by 0.1V, and then run Memtest again.

    I do lean toward a possible PSU problem, as the problems really don't make a good fit toward what I've just suggested. Better to cover all your bases, though.
     

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