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johhnyGuru.
First of all the confusing part is that I don't think pins 1-2 are the ones toward the BIOS (edge of the mb). Look at page 1-21 in the manual on the CD. It shows pin 3 next to the BIOS chip. The jumper was on the pins toward the center of the mb when I received it, which would be pins 1-2 per the diagram on page 1-21. >>
What did I say? I said that Pin 1 is AWAY from the BIOS chip. 3 is closest to the BIOS chip. This is correct.
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However, this does not jive with the diagram shown on the quick install card or the mb diagram on page 1-7 which shows pin 1 next to the BIOS chip. >>
This diagram is wrong. I can understand how you're confused.
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I have been trouble shooting with the jumper on the 2 pins towards the center of the mb. If I put the jumper on the 2 pins closest to the BIOS chip nothing happens at all, no fans, nothing. >>
Right. Motherboards tend to not power up when the clear CMOS is on the clear position. Therefore, I think you answered your own question here.
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The red LED did come on the first time I turned the computer on and the computer (mb) beeped at me (one beep over and over). >>
This would tell me that the board and CPU are live. Typically, a dead motherboard or a dead CPU do not give beep codes.
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After moving the RAM from DIMM1 to DIMM2 the red light never came back on or beeped, but nothing else ever happened either. Now nothing happens no matter what I do, where the RAM is, everything but the CPU removed, etc... >>
This is strange. First you get a no RAM beep and then you get nothing even with no RAM installed? Look at the DIMM. Are any of the contacts burnt? Look at the DIMM slot. Is any of the plastic melted? In other words, did you unintentionally put the RAM in backwards? I know you're not SUPPOSED to be able to, but I see it done about two or three times a week with DDR.
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The chipset and CPU fans spin, but that's it. >>
Great... That means you have power.[/i] >>
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This is the RAM I bought. >>
Moot point. Without RAM you should get a beep over and over again. You got that once, but after moving the RAM you got nothing. With no RAM, you should still get the beep. Either the CPU overheated and fried between getting the RAM beep and not getting the RAM beep (maybe the beep you got at first was because it wasn't all of the way in the slot) or the board fried somehow. Either way, if you have nothing but a motherboard, CPU and power supply and nothing else, you should get a beep.
Pull the board out of the case and try it with the speakers plugged in. What happens?
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I removed the heatsink to check the CPU and it does not appear to be fried. The pink stuff appears to have done what it is supposed to do. The CPU is intact, not cracked, etc... I would be able to tell by looking at the CPU if it were fried right?? I can remount it with some arctic silver and try it again I guess..... waddya think?? >>
What good is that going to do except for make a mess? The computer is not even posting. Improved thermal interface is not going to change this. An hour into an operating machine may benefit from a better thermal solution, but right now it would be nice to have it come up.
