Yeah, I guess it used to be P4 only, but the AMD board started useing it too and yes, you certainly should plug it in. The other two ("regular" flat 4 pin molex power and floppy power connector) are kind of optional, but suppoed to make the board more stable, so can't hurt to use them...
Look for the 4 red leds down in the bottom left corner (if the board is oriented normally in a case) See if they are on or go out when you boot up. The error codes are in the manual. There are also some beep codes I think, but you have to turn on the speaker in bios I think. Start out with one...
Isn't that what num lock is supposed to do? It toggles between the keypad typeing numbers and functioning like directional arrows doesn't it?
It might help. I'm ruing 2/01 (beta) still. But I did have problems with 1/25 so any bios upgrade would probably help some.
Which bios are you using Reijison? As for the PSU, yes a 20 pin can work, but overclocking is probably a bad idea. Use the 20 pin w/o the 20 to 24 addapter for the time being if you can. Check out dfi-street.com for more on this board. Recomended PSUs Check out hardocp.com forms. There's a...
DFI strongly recomends a real 24 pin PSU and Definatly NOT to use a 20 to 24 pin addapter. If you just bought that PSU take/send it back and get a real 24 pin PSU. (read in this thread around page 7 also)
I moded my Ultra-D to SLI and it shows up as an SLI now on the boot screen, but I got mine awhile back from ZipZoomFly. Rev.02 according to the sticker and .03 acording to Ntune.
I think I read that the Asus bridge (or maybe another board) won't work because it's a differnt width between the...
I also had trouble with HyperX. Luckly I was planning on using some OCZ I had in my old machine, but I had just gotten the HyperX so I tried it out and couldn't get it to work at all.
I've tried runing the auto tune for quiet and it seems to just keep running and running. (for well over 20 minutes) and trying the system performance it locked up near the end. Can you acutally get it to auto tune?
Unless some one has a better idea, I'd say looking at it is the only way, unless they've changed the revision number of the board or something. What revision do you have? It's on a sticker on the bottom pci slot. (not the top pcie slot which also has a sticker) It's a pain to see if you've...
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