It is a st61g4 shuttle pc a friend gave it to me whitout ram harddrive and cmos batterie so i put new ones inside but it keeps rebooting again and again i can not load a os everything look to work fine in the bios tanks RENE
i tried what BPSHBP wrote but nothing it reeboot again and again i see all the drives in the bios and at the right place someone told me i had to start that ting with a floppy on the floppy plug on the motherboard my hard drive is empty everything is on IDE or could it be the mobo POPPER951i tried what BPSHBP wrote but nothing it reeboot again and again i see all the drives in the bios and at the right place someone told me i had to start that ting with a floppy on the floppy plug on the motherboard my hard drive is empty everything is on IDE or could it be the mobo POPPER951
You can't post conmments that contain an email address.
- If you need clarification, ask it in the comment box above.
- Better answers use proper spelling and grammar.
- Provide details, support with references or personal experience.
Tell us some more! Your answer needs to include more details to help people.You can't post answers that contain an email address.Please enter a valid email address.The email address entered is already associated to an account.Login to postPlease use English characters only.
Tip: The max point reward for answering a question is 15.
I would recommend removing the CMOS battery inside the pc and replace it again to reset the CMOS, and then Reboot pc and while rebooting, keep tapping F4. MAKE SURE YOUR PC IS OFF BEFORE REMOVING CMOS BATTERY. ( CMOS battery is a round wafer battery of 3 volts DC) This may fix your issue.If you are uncomfortable doing this, get a PC Tech
It seems as though your BIOS settings are saving correctly, most likely due to a bad CMOS battery. You should replace the battery, you can normally find them near the watch batteries in stores.
i seem the power supply gone bad, it is hard to say what is the problem actually, you need to check all of your devices(processor, ram, video card, motherboard and power supply) to some other system one by one for confirmation.
at the bottom you'll find the 2 RAM-memory slots for the SD-RAM 144-PIN modules
(the bigger one in the center, 2 screws)
to access harddisk and cmos battery:
follow the instructions:
you will need: a slim x-screw-driver a sharp knife with a slim blade and a cup or else for the screws, don't loose them! a new c-mos bios battery model: CR-1220 (exchange it while your in there!)
you find c-mos battery and hdd under the keyboard!
- turn off the power, remove accu and charger cable, for static electricity is friendly fire to your laptop now !
- open your screen to max. fold (angle of 180 degrees)
- look for removable plastic part near to left holder of screen - carefully remove it - also remove plastic panel right to it in the section between display holders metal should be visible now - carefully! remove keyboard, starting at the left side, continuing topside as you won't be able to fully remove it, simply turn it over - unscrew any screws holding the metal plate, remove it - now you see: left the CPU plus cooler, top right middle the hdd still in an adapter attached to the mainboard, at it's lower right the C-MOS battery (g - turn loos these screws - carefully remove the frame/adaptor holding the hdd - unscrew again the adaptor - seperate hd fram adaptor
... and gotcha!
be careful to get a proper notebook hd (samsung or such) exchange CMOS-battery by chance reattach new hd to frame, again carefully!
to reassamble: rewind the procedures put everything back in place
If this is new RAM, you might want to try removing the battery from the motherboard, resetting the CMOS (clears out all the old hardware settings) and putting the battery back in so that the motherboard redetects the RAM as if the setup was brand new. I've had the same problem only once on a RAM upgrade and it baffled me. Once I reset the CMOS the motherboard accepted the new RAM without any problems. I don't know if this will work for you, but it's a simple thing to try.
It's possible the power cord is defective only giving enough power for a partial boot. I would try another power cord.
If it's not the powercord then it would definitely be the motherboard not taking the power and distributing it correctly and you would have to replace it.
The "No Signal" display is an indication that there is no video output from your PC going towards the monitor. Cycling the power on/off a few times before the unit will start indicates there is a problem with the PC basic configuration. This may include: 1. Defective, dirty, loose memory sticks - clean or replace; 2. Defective, dirty, loose video card - clean or replace; 3. BIOS/CMOS settings too aggressive or not stable - set to default;
You can also try resetting the CMOS/BIOS to default settings by moving the reset jumper from its original position to the opposite end (1-2, then make it 2-3) temporarily. The reset jumper is normally very near the Lithium back-up battery. Alternately, removing the battery for an hour would also do the same, reset.
In some instances, it is the CPU fan blower that does not startup causing the system to halt. If so, it needs to be removed, cleaned, lubricated and re-installed.
At other times it can be cause by devices nearing end of its life. These may include the HD and the CD.
Still, this could also be caused by external devices which cannot be accessed/read at the startup such as a flashdrive.
Hope this be of some help/idea. Pls post back how things turned up or should you need additional information.
i tried what BPSHBP wrote but nothing it reeboot again and again i see all the drives in the bios and at the right place someone told me i had to start that ting with a floppy on the floppy plug on the motherboard my hard drive is empty everything is on IDE or could it be the mobo POPPER951
×