![]() It’s a Gigabyte GA-EX58-UD3R with an i7 and a 4890, and two terabyte hds on SATA and one SATA DVD burner. Yes, that probably would help, wouldn’t it? Obviously, I don’t mean useful steps like resetting the CMOS in this thread, I mean the crazy shit that gets bandied about on this topic. They really need to come with an always-on switch for emergencies, and if I find the guy who decided it was a good idea to remove motherboard beep speakers from being standard equipment I will cut him. “Oh your computer is stuck on the splash screen, well then that means” and then everyone seems to play mad libs with the cause/solution until the guy accidentally fixes it and posts in relief or presumably kills himself.ĭisconnecting the ram did get a slightly different result (no splash screen, nothing on the monitor) but I’m not 100% sure on account of the stupid monitor’s wonkiness. I’m sure it’s some tiny “you must do this when you reassemble a computer after taking it apart” detail that I’m missing, but the advice with these indicators is so useless across the internet. I’ve been advised to listen for beeps, but I hear nothing despite connecting the speaker cables (both hd audio and ac/97) to both of the available sound ports on the motherboard in turn.Īny ideas on what the issue might be? Other than LOL WATERCOOLING YOU DESERVE WHAT YOU GET LOL?Īt this point I’ve tried disconnecting virtually everything short of the graphics card (no internal graphics). The only indicator I have is the motherboard LED track, which seems to be fully illuminated for whatever that’s worth. And then the stupid dell monitor goes to sleep, only to periodically turn back on with the same splash screen. I’ve tried connecting a different (bog standard) MS keyboard through a PS2 adapter, but it still won’t let me access any of the boot menus. However, when I turn on the computer, it won’t go past the motherboard splash screen. Obviously I can’t measure temperatures yet since I can’t get past the splash screen. The water part is circulating flawlessly, and appears rock solid. I replaced the heatsink on the processor and the radiator system, as well as all of the internal plumbing. So because everything was working more or less, I decided to upgrade the cooling system on my computer because I was fed up with dealing with the idiosyncrasies of a poorly designed external radiator.
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