4 Operator

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14.4K Posts

March 2nd, 2009 07:00

The size make no difference and because it is smaller it may be better.

there can be many factors as to how both sticks could go.
I would suggest you do take a good look at the capacitors on the motherboard looking for any that show signs of leaking or bulging tops.

4 Operator

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14.4K Posts

March 1st, 2009 16:00

Lights 123,,, the Dreaded "Another Failue has Occured"

I am leaning at the moment harddrive as a possible suspect. *** try this. remove everthing from the computer, ram cards, and pull the power from all the drives.

Remove all external connection too and power it up. look at the powerbutton light, the diagnostic lights, If there is no change then the motherboard is gone.

4 Operator

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14.4K Posts

March 1st, 2009 18:00

With all removed you saw the beep code and diagnostic code for no ram modules being detected.

What indication do you get with all the ram removed and all else installed?

9 Posts

March 1st, 2009 18:00

Firstly, thanks for responding to my post.

Okay, there was a change when I pulled everything.  First I got light 1 and beep code 1-3-2.  I added the following one at a time:  one stick of RAM in slot 1, the graphics card, power to the hard drive, then power to the CD/DVD drive.  After adding the RAM it went back to the original 123 and 2 beeps, and it stayed the same through each addition.  One thing I noted this time that I hadn't the other times is that the HD light comes on briefly while the diagnostic lights are flashing.  So, what do you think?  My head has been swimming so much with trying to figure this out that I'm incapable at this point of analyzing what this means.  I can't tell you how much I appreciate any input.  If this thing is truly dead I want it declared as such so I can move on.

 

9 Posts

March 2nd, 2009 04:00

With all RAM removed and everything else plugged in, I again get light 1 and beep code 1-3-2.

4 Operator

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14.4K Posts

March 2nd, 2009 05:00

I would suspect the memory at this time. one or both could be bad. You can try putting one stick in slot 1 and see if it boots, then remove that stick and instert the next. If neither work then they both are probably gone.

If there were other issues besides the memory you would get a different sequence of lights and beeps

9 Posts

March 2nd, 2009 07:00

I pulled stick 1 and put in stick 2, and at first I got lights 34 and 1-3-2 beep code, but after reseating it, it went back to lights 123 with 2 beeps.  I'm going to try to find someone with the same type of RAM who will let me try theirs in my machine.  If it doesn't have the same capacity as mine (1G each), will that make a difference in determining if my RAM is bad?  (I know Vista won't run well with less, but I'm just looking for a firm diagnosis before I run out to buy new RAM.)  And just out curiosity and for future reference, if both sticks of  RAM spontaneously went bad, what could cause this?

Again, thanks for the help.

9 Posts

March 2nd, 2009 09:00

I really can't thank you enough for taking the time to help me.  You're my hero. :emotion-2:

Have a great day!

4 Operator

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14.4K Posts

March 2nd, 2009 09:00

Looks like a new board will run you in the 250+ price range.  No there is really not much one can do to prevent this and it is just a fact of electronics. chances are if there is one there might be more that are ready to go too.


It might just be a time to salvage what you can and upgrade to a new system.

9 Posts

March 2nd, 2009 09:00

OMG, you so hit the nail on the head.  I have one bulged capacitor.  So, is that it?  Declare time of death and move on to a new computer?  Or what about a repair?  From my research, it doesn't sound like it's worth it to replace the motherboard, but I haven't priced out a repair.   Is there some way I could have avoided this or was it just bad luck?

Thank you!

 

4 Operator

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14.4K Posts

March 2nd, 2009 10:00

You are most welcome.

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