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Worst thing is that this drive is not removable, so I cannot check the IDE connection
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All storage devices are removable. Your choice is to send it back to Compaq for repair or do it yourself (and void your warranty).
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997 ----- "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001
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John,
Yes, I agree. All drives are removable; however, what I meant was this drive cannot be removed without actually opening the laptop.
I'd love to send it to Compaq, but warranty expired already for it.
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See what happens if you try booting off a live linux CD. IF you have trouble doing this consistently it's probably a hardware issue, if it works flawlessly every time it's probably software.
--
If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.
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I tried to boot it up from a live Ubuntu CD (I changed the BIOS), and it didn't do it.
So, I guess the drive is broken
Thanks for your help.
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- Hi! I just noticed this the other day, but in bios I have one temp sensor and it reads a minimum of 60C/~145F
- How do I recalibrate this because this just doesn't seem possible (fry an egg;P in there even though its cold ?)
AMD Athlon XP 2000+ @ 1.67 GHz
Fans x2
"Shorter of breath,
and one day closer to death." ~Pink Floyd
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I've never seen a motherboard that has the ability to recalibrate the sensors. It would appear that it has failed.
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Check for bios upgrades for the motherboard.
I've had one or two MBs, where the bios code for reading the sensor was wrong, and was fixed in a later version of the bios.
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I bought a thrift store Compaq Presario to use its power supply and case for a project.
It has a power switch on the back, but the front power switch attaches to the motherboard (which is now in the trash).
I need the power to be controlled only by the switch on the back.
After looking at AT power supply pin diagrams and experimenting I determined that connecting the PowerGood (Orange) line to the -5v (Grey) line does the trick.
Does anyone have any tips or gotchas to share?
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Hi PIEBALD,
PIEBALDconsult wrote: connecting the PowerGood (Orange) line to the -5v (Grey) line does the trick.
that does not sound right at all, in many ways.
According to some documents (Google!) the "power good" signal is an output from the
power supply, which becomes high to tell the motherboard power is good enough to start up
(hence release the /RESET input).
If the control line is a pseudo-digital one, it should either be pulled high, or pulled
to ground, never negative.
Normally I expect you need to connect a SENSE input to the corresponding voltage output
(that is 3.3V SENSE to 3.3V; or 5.0V SENSE to 5V on older systems). The sense feedback
should occur on the motherboard, as close to the highest load as possible, it is intended
to achieve a well regulated voltage at that location, independent of voltage drops along
the cables/PCB tracks due to varying currents.
In conclusion, maybe you interconnected the right pins, but I doubt the names you
mentioned apply; and anyhow, if one of them is a sense line, the connection should be
next to the actual load, not right at the power supply.
So I suggest you check the documentation again, and possibly throw a multimeter to it,
to make sure voltages are what they should be.
Regards,
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]
this months tips:
- use PRE tags to preserve formatting when showing multi-line code snippets
- before you ask a question here, search CodeProject, then Google
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Hi,
the fourth link tells us ATpsu should work without any special wiring.
didn't it work for you with PG open?
the second link suggests "power good" is an output which goes high when everything
has stabilized, as I expected. So connecting it to -5V seems a bad idea.
And I trust you read about the minimum load required (around 0.8A).
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]
this months tips:
- use PRE tags to preserve formatting when showing multi-line code snippets
- before you ask a question here, search CodeProject, then Google
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Most sources say that the AT PSU has the front switch connected directly to it, whereas the ATX has the front switch connected to the motherboard; this particular one seems to be an in-between design; newer than AT, older than ATX.
I'll mention that it also has another connector for the motherboard with three green and three black wires, which (from what I read) seems to be for PCI cards?
Luc Pattyn wrote: And I trust you read about the minimum load required (around 0.8A).
I skipped it until I read your earlier response.
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It might be a nonstandard design like the dell PSUs from that era, in which case you'll need to track down maker specific data. IIRC the standard (but rarely used) 1x6 extra power cable provided 2 different voltages as well as ground.
--
If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.
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I've now connected the -5 to ground and it seems to be working fine.
If it goes "poof" I'll let you know.
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Why do you insist on short-circuiting something? the purpose of the -5V output pin is to
provide a voltage of -5V with respect to the GROUND pins, and not to be short-circuited.
Maybe it will survive your abuse, but it does not have to. And maybe it will solve your
problem, but it does not have to either.
The only thing you should do is provide some load to the +5V (i.e. between +5V and ground)
in such a way that at least 0.8A is flowing all the time. A 5 to 6 ohm resistor should
do the trick, but be careful it will heat up and must be strong enough to dissipate
4 to 5W (current*voltage) so it cannot be a regular .25W or .5W resistor, it would have
to be one of those wire-wound resistors (about 1 inch long, 1/3 inch thick).
Alternatively you could attach a light bulb (as from a bike's or car's head light),
that too would (have to) heat up a bit, again dissipating some 5 Watts.
What also is supposed to work is just connecting an obsolete motherboard, whatever is on
board will need a couple amps.
And whatever you do, once everything has been set up, I suggest you actually measure the
voltages you plan on using, before you use them, since after your experiments I am not
that confident your PSU is still OK...
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]
this months tips:
- use PRE tags to preserve formatting when showing multi-line code snippets
- before you ask a question here, search CodeProject, then Google
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Vibrator of my Nokia 6600 is not working properly for 3 days, does anyone one know how to troubleshoot that.
Best Regards,
Mushq
Mushtaque Ahmed Nizamani
Software Engineer
Ultimus Pakistan
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Mushq wrote: Vibrator of my Nokia 6600 is not working properly for 3 days
I don't want to know how you broke it. It could be because of over-use.
Mushq wrote: does anyone one know how to troubleshoot that.
Does it vibrate? No? It's broke.
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Shut down/close the phone, boot it up again; see if it reset the vibration.
Toggle on and off the vibration mode, just in case.
Reset the phone ( there must be a reset menu somewhere ) to the factory settings.
if it does not work, pay a visit on one of the howard chui forums (google for howard chui ), maybe someone can help you.
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Maximilien wrote: Shut down/close the phone, boot it up again; see if it reset the vibration.
Toggle on and off the vibration mode, just in case.
Reset the phone ( there must be a reset menu somewhere ) to the factory settings.
I tried, but these didn't work.
Maximilien wrote: if it does not work, pay a visit on one of the howard chui forums (google for howard chui ), maybe someone can help you.
Thanks for that, I am going to check that.
Best Regards,
Mushq
Mushtaque Ahmed Nizamani
Software Engineer
Ultimus Pakistan
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Fundamentally it's a small motor with an off-balance weight attached to the shaft. It will eventually fail.
DoEvents : Generating unexpected recursion since 1991
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It's most likely that the motor itself has gone. It's an individual component that sits into the main housing so a full disassemby but no soldering is required.
Pop along or post to your nearest Nokia Care point (you'll find them on your countries Nokia web site) and they will fix it for you, shouldn't cost much.
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Hi all,
I wanted to enquire about a topic which just came into picture in our organization...
We all know that adding RAM increase the system performance..but upto a certain extent after that adding RAM starts affecting the system performance.I intend to know that point after which if I would increase the RAM my system performance will go down.
Currently I am using Dell Optiplex GX745 Desktop with Pentium D 3.40 GHz and 1GB RAM.
Regards,
Dhawal Seth
Software Consultant
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Going from 1 dimm per channel to two dimms per channel will result in a very slight performance decrease because the second dimm will require the memory controller to use slightly looser timings. IIRC all P4D systems are dual channel so that would be going from 2 dimms to 4. Going from 2 to 3 would result in a major hit since the with the nonsymetric memory you'd end up running in single channel mode.
The capacity of the dimms has no bearing on this, and if going from 2x512 = 1gb to 4x1024=4gb allows you to reduce/eliminate your swap file usage the gain from that will dwarf the hit from memory timings.
--
If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.
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Hi,
I have this motherboard and an Realtek RTL8187 Wireless 802.11g onboard wireless card. However, it couldn't seem to be able to detect our home wireless internet signal? Anyone experience the same? TIA!
I am a SysAdmin, I battle my own daemons.
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