1. error
- Posted by mwfch at MWEB.CO.ZA Aug 11, 2001
- 525 views
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2. Re: error
- Posted by thinkways at YAHOO.COM Aug 11, 2001
- 517 views
the pattern of beeps could be a post code (power on self test). Is your motherboard getting proper ventillation? try this link for beep codes. http://www.pcguide.com/ts/x/sys/beep/ --- mwfch at MWEB.CO.ZA wrote: > > I know that this is an oftoppic but I need help . > After a short time my computer just restarts . Then > it gives these long beeps . What is it ? Thanks to > this I have lost a lot of code . Please help . > > FG > > > > > >
3. Re: error
- Posted by Irv Mullins <irvm at ellijay.com> Aug 11, 2001
- 533 views
--- mwfch at MWEB.CO.ZA wrote: > > > > I know that this is an oftoppic but I need help . > > After a short time my computer just restarts . Then > > it gives these long beeps . What is it ? Thanks to > > this I have lost a lot of code . Please help . > > That's most likely a memory error. It may be that the memory is ok, but is just loose in the socket, or there is some corrosion on the contacts. If you don't mind opening up your computer, you might try unplugging the memory, blowing the dust out of things, and plugging it back in. Sometimes that helps. Be sure the power is off, and don't unplug anything you don't know how to plug in again! Regards, Irv
4. Re: error
- Posted by Gerardo <gebrandariz at YAHOO.COM> Aug 12, 2001
- 531 views
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5. Re: error
- Posted by rforno at tutopia.com Aug 12, 2001
- 516 views
Kat: Sometimes I have noticed a power drop lasting perhaps 1/10th of a second in the room lights, that did not affect the PC. This is much more than your 1/120th of a second. This is because the AC power is rectified and stabilized in the power source inside the computer, where there is a capacitor that can hold the low-level voltage for a fraction of a second. But if the outside voltage is a bit low, when it drops more for let's say one or two seconds, it may cause the PC to reset. ----- Original Message ----- From: <gertie at ad-tek.net> To: "EUforum" <EUforum at topica.com> Subject: RE: error > > On 11 Aug 2001, at 19:04, Bernie Ryan wrote: > > > > > > > > mwfch at MWEB.CO.ZA wrote: > > > I know that this is an oftoppic but I need help . After a short time my > > > computer just restarts . Then it gives these long beeps . What is it ? > > > Thanks to this I have lost a lot of code . Please help . > > > > > > FG > > > > > > > > Its sounds like you are have a problem with bad memory. > > One of the memory dim/sim boards may be loose or going bad. > > > > The other possibilty is that your power supply is going bad > > or something in the system is loaded down the power supply voltages > > intermittently. > > If the power drops off for one cycle, 1/120th of a second, the puter can get massive > heart failure, and may reboot, or lock up. Designing power suplies with no margin > makes them lighter, cheaper, and more efficient, so it also means everything else > must be better,,, and the power company is the weakest link, followed by flakey outlet > strips. Get a small UPS, with 10 minutes of puter + monitor power, and plug the puter > into it, not an outlet strip. My UPS beeps at least once a day, usually several times a > day. Each beep is at least a micro power outage, and would have wiped the puter if the > UPS had not caught it. I had given up on using ibm-clone puters while i still had the > C64, because i could run the C64 on batteries, while the power co kept killing the big > puter. > > A bad program writing outside allotted memory will also reboot the puter. > > Kat > > > > >
6. Re: error
- Posted by Kat <gertie at PELL.NET> Aug 12, 2001
- 517 views
On 11 Aug 2001, at 20:49, rforno at tutopia.com wrote: > > > Kat: > Sometimes I have noticed a power drop lasting perhaps 1/10th of a second in > the > room lights, that did not affect the PC. This is much more than your 1/120th > of > a second. You must not have a very loaded computer. I have 3 harddrives which get used often enough that they never sleep 24-7, etc etc.. Could be you have a problem with the room lights too, or that power circuit. > This is because the AC power is rectified and stabilized in the power > source inside the computer, where there is a capacitor that can hold the > low-level voltage for a fraction of a second. But if the outside voltage is a > bit low, when it drops more for let's say one or two seconds, it may cause the > PC to reset. Thats cute, hun. To make this short, i know what a capacitor is and how they operate and their ratings. That fraction of a second can be remarkably short. There is no way you will get a desktop puter to stay awake thru a 1 sec power blackout, with the harddrives running, on a standard PC power supply. The secondary side caps are there more for filtering than bulk storage, the primary side caps are as small as possible to make the supply cheaper. Rule of thumb: if the 120v power skips *one* cycle, the puter is in trouble,, and 99.9% of the time, you can count on it crashing if two are missed. I have watched on the scope as cheaper supplies went out of proper regulation if *1/2* of a cycle got clipped. This also depends on the powerline, how much it charged the primary side caps before the power was cut, the cap's ESR, circuit design, etc... Your mileage may vary, but i swear *by* the battery backup supplies, and i swear *at* the power companies. And by the way, *most* equipment power supplies use only the peak of the sine wave, and i have seen many times, on outdoor stage events, when the power amps clobber the line peaks, the mixer or other equipment screws up royally. Puter power supplies also use only the peaks, and if that *peak* drops below 130v, it's useless as the supplies are designed, even if the lights are still on. Kat <snip>
7. Re: error
- Posted by Irv Mullins <irvm at ellijay.com> Aug 12, 2001
- 516 views
----- Original Message ----- From: Kat <gertie at PELL.NET> <snipps> > Your mileage may vary, but i swear *by* the battery > backup supplies, and i swear *at* the power companies. Which reminds me, what kind of UPS was that which survived the lightening strike recently? Sounds like a pretty good one to have. Regards, Irv
8. Re: error
- Posted by Kat <gertie at PELL.NET> Aug 12, 2001
- 523 views
On 12 Aug 2001, at 15:48, Irv Mullins wrote: > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Kat <gertie at PELL.NET> > > <snipps> > > > Your mileage may vary, but i swear *by* the battery > > backup supplies, and i swear *at* the power companies. > > Which reminds me, what kind of UPS was that which survived the lightening > strike > recently? Sounds like a pretty good one to have. "Blackout Buster". It was the best price and the best specs i could find. It has a remote control interface, and is rather intelligent. The phone line into the UPS was melted down, plastic all over the place, the wire contacts in the phone jack on the back of the UPS were melted down, the pine tree died, the electrical heat tape on the water pipe into House is melted down, and one GFI breaker is toast as well. The puter is fine (it didn't hiccup thru the whole stormy day), so is the modem, and the audio/video equipment. I now have the phone line run thru another MOV arrestor block. For times when the power is out over 5 minutes, i have a separate continuous duty invertor on a deep discharge battery good for 10 hrs, and a baby generator for longer times of power outages. To me, it's just foolhardy to use a puter without being able to supply your own electricity for at least the time it takes to execute a controlled shutdown. Even if you don't mind losing all the code you just wrote since the last save, and the data files, the MS OSs will surely wipe themselves out when they run scandisk and trash the open files when you reboot. And i prefer to keep Tiggr online all the time, some people have come to expect her to be there, so i place a premium on reliability. There was an animated discussion the other night about just *how* alive she is, and the definitions of such words as "alive" and "program", and she participated in the discussion, in her own defense. Under those conditions, one could think of the UPS as a life support system, eh? Kat
9. error
- Posted by Kat <gertie at PELL.NET> May 28, 2002
- 523 views
Well, this is a new one on me: unknown command end if ^ Kat
10. error
- Posted by david <studmeow at hotmail.com> Sep 22, 2004
- 498 views
the newbies message board is going nowhere. no matter what pass word I put in, it won't accept it. then when I go back & try another one, it say that name is in use. how can it be in use if it wouldn't accept it? so long, try again, maybe you'll get it right next time.
11. Re: error
- Posted by Tommy Carlier <tommy.carlier at telenet.be> Sep 22, 2004
- 528 views
david wrote: > the newbies message board is going nowhere. no matter what pass > word I put in, it won't accept it. then when I go back & try > another one, it say that name is in use. how can it be in use if > it wouldn't accept it? so long, try again, maybe you'll get it > right next time. Do you want me to delete you (I mean: your name ), so you can try again? -- tommy online: http://users.telenet.be/tommycarlier tommy.blog: http://tommycarlier.blogspot.com Euphoria Message Board: http://uboard.proboards32.com
12. Re: error
- Posted by david <studmeow at hotmail.com> Sep 23, 2004
- 510 views
The board & the newbies who want to use it would be better served if the webmaster (or whoever maintains it) figured out what was causing the error & corrected it. Thanks for responding.