Aces High Bulletin Board
Help and Support Forums => Technical Support => Topic started by: Urchin on November 06, 2007, 07:14:17 PM
-
I decided that I would replace a perfectly good CPU with a new dual core AMD 64 x2 4200+ , kind of on a whim.
Probably the dumbest whim I've ever given in to.
System will not boot up with the new chip, no beeps or boops or nothing. HDD light comes on and stays on, monitor doesn't come on at all.
I've got a A8N-SLI Premium motherboard, and it is compatible with the new chip according to the mobo maker.
I'd love to replace the old chip, but I apparently managed to bend the ever loving @#$@#%@#%$@ out of the pins taking it out.
I know the chip is in there right, I matched up the corner right, the fan locks down no problem at all, no forcing at all.
Please help me out, I'm at wits end.
FIXED IT... please delete it.
-
What was it?
-
Forgot to lock the chip in place with the little post looking thing... I didn't raise it to put the chip in then lower it, I just put the chip in and put the fan on over it.
-
Well congratulations on getting it up and running!
I have to say.. it takes a real man to admit to doing something like that! Just look on the bright side.. that's how we learn! You won't make that mistake again! Haha... enjoy!
-
Originally posted by Urchin
Forgot to lock the chip in place with the little post looking thing... I didn't raise it to put the chip in then lower it, I just put the chip in and put the fan on over it.
Dont feel bad, my dad left the plastic cover on his dual core chip and installed it, and wondered why his wouldnt "beep" on POST too :).
Balsy
-
HAHA my plastic cover had in BIG BRIGHT letters "REMOVE FIRST".. kind of hard to miss.
I remember installing an old Pentium processor wrong back in the day.. I didn't know about the corner notch... needless to say the pins were pretty much toast!
-
I thought Skuzzy said the 'AMD' dual cores presented some grief to AH, unlike the Intels of same variety?
-
Originally posted by bj229r
I thought Skuzzy said the 'AMD' dual cores presented some grief to AH, unlike the Intels of same variety?
AMD DC proc with xp work wonderfully once fixes are applied.
-
Mine really does work wonderfully actually.
I did have to install the little patch thing, and I think I told it to run in Windows 98 compatibility mode, but I can now run it with the 512 textures (instead of 256) and maintain a solid 60 FPS through any and all action.
Smoke, trees, lots of planes, whatever... stays rock solid at 60.
Running an AMD 4200+ CPU (2.4 Gig dual core), an old ATI x800 Pro PCI-e video card, and 3 Gigs worth of RAM.
Its pretty awesome actually, and the planes are much prettier with the 512 textures compared to the 256 ones.
-
Urchin I can run 1024 textures with a setup one or two steps under yours, no hiccups of any sort (or rarely when i leave explorer.exe running).
That's a slower video card than mine, but the CPU and ram are 600 "MHz" faster and three times larger respectively... I'm pretty sure 3GB should be enough for 1024.
-
i thought that explorer.exe was necessary for XP to run.
-
Originally posted by clerick
i thought that explorer.exe was necessary for XP to run.
After reading this i added explorer.exe to the list for fsautostart to stop and restart.
I have trackir as the main program, a 5 second delay, then set aces high as the 2nd program to start.
When i'm done with the session. i exit, then quit ah, which brings me to the desktop. The desktop has the trackir box open and the desktop picture, that's it. I close trackir, and all the processes re-start, including explorer.exe and everything goes back to normal.
So it works without a problem, in fact everything seems to run smoother.
-
Jacked it up to 1024 textures... runs smooth and it is beautiful. Thanks moot :)
-
I've an inquiry about FSautostart--I see TONS of 'processes' I can manually stop from task bar, but only 'services' and 'programs' can be fiddled with via FSauto...what is best way to do this? (I presently start off with some 46 processes and 4-5 programs, it gets down to some 25 processes....about 5 of which are attributed to Norton and refuse to stop)
-
This is one of the better threads I've read in awhile. Some good she-ite your discussing.
Ive always wondered about all the processes-which ones you needed and which ones you didn't.
-
Originally posted by bj229r
I've an inquiry about FSautostart--I see TONS of 'processes' I can manually stop from task bar, but only 'services' and 'programs' can be fiddled with via FSauto...what is best way to do this? (I presently start off with some 46 processes and 4-5 programs, it gets down to some 25 processes....about 5 of which are attributed to Norton and refuse to stop)
The "services" are the ones your shutting down. I have an older version of FSautostart (1.0 i believe) On mine when you open the services window, there is a panel that you can open on the right side. When you mouse over an item in the main window, it puts up info on it in the right panel IF it has any. I've found in my version, that it doesn't recognize many, most like due to the age of my version.
A great resource for what to shut down, and what not to is Vipers site (http://www.blackviper.com/index.html) In the "popular content area, select your operating system, and have at it. He has list of the main windows process services that are on most computers. Most of the names are clickable for more info on each process. He list whether to enable, disable, or leave alone all of the processes. On the far right of the listing is his recommendations as "bare bones" (as lean as you can get it), "power user" ( a few more bells and whistles), and "safe" for those chickens who are a bit nervous about this stuff :t
For any processes you have on your computer that are NOT listed, just google them and read the top few hits on them. In most cases you'll find them all saying the same thing about it, either leave it alone, or its ok to disable, I just go with the majority here. If you don't feel like there is a good majority, leave it alone.
Remember, you can screw any thing up with FSautostart. If you turn off something you shouldn't have and your computer crashes, just reboot, and everything is back to normal.
My process would be to go through vipers "power user" list, and setting FSautostart with that. See how things run, If I need more stuff turned off (I like to get my processes down into the "teens") I'd start googling the rest. I would add the ones I'm sure about to FSautostart and try it again. If things still run good, but I need more I'll start adding the one I wasn't so sure of one at a time till I find one that crashes my system, or I get down enough in the processes I have running.
-
Thanks for writing all that and saving me the trouble..:aok
The Fugitive pretty much summed up exactly the same way i do it.
As far as Norton. When i had it on my old computer it was a pain in the arse to shut down. I can't say if this will work for you or not, but i would have to disable norton from the task bar first. Then i'd have to open up the task manager and shut down each individual norton process that was running. After playing i'd have to reboot to get everything back to normal.
-
Well, I lied about the 1024 textures. Works well in the DA in the little furball area, doesnt work so well in the MA. When I drop down low the FPS drops into the 30's - low 40's... and I get little mini freezes sort of at random. Think I'll drop it back down to 512, the eye candy isnt worth the performance hit.
-
Originally posted by bj229r
I've an inquiry about FSautostart--I see TONS of 'processes' I can manually stop from task bar, but only 'services' and 'programs' can be fiddled with via FSauto...what is best way to do this? (I presently start off with some 46 processes and 4-5 programs, it gets down to some 25 processes....about 5 of which are attributed to Norton and refuse to stop)
Problem is, as I can best tell, is that the PROCESSES and the SERVICES don't have the same names...tedious