- Oct 30, 2007
- 5
- 0
- 0
Ok, long story short, I decided to upgrade my RAM, video card and hard drive, due to some serious and lengthy hard drive access I had happening while gaming. Now I'm no professional A++ guy, but I can manage my way around inside my own box.
I ran a ram test that I downloaded from the windows site and it resulted in no errors. So naturally i though that perhaps I had a bad platter in my hard drive. So I elected to upgrade the ram along with the hard drive, which then led me to a video card update, which then led to a new power supply.
So I get the PSU in the mail and it's dead from the start. Living here in the UK (unfortunately stationed here for too long now) I was forced to buy a 700w PSU on the economy. Little pricey, but it works at least. I installed it with zero errors, powered on and viola.
System specs:
Dell Dimension 9100
NVIDIA GEFORCE 8800 GTS (upgraded from ATI x850XT)
3GB of DDR2 4200 ram (upgraded from factory default of 1GB)
pentium 4 w HT (next to be upgraded)
700w PSU (upgraded from factory default of 375w)
After installing the new hardware everything worked great, except my ide controller now woulnd't recognize my two cd drives. After fighting with this thing for hours, switching jumpers, going to a USB cd and still get a "no boot device available" error, I thoguht perhaps a BIOS flash was in order. No matter what I tried, I couldn't get the system to boot off the internal cd (because it never recognized it) nor would it access the USB cd even though it saw it in BIOS.
So I downloaded the latest BIOS from dell and flashed it from within windows. Now, the system turns on for about a second, then powers off and then powers back on after about a 3 second delay. No video is displayed and the cpu fan engages in all out whaling mode and the system emits a series of grinding beeps in a series of two bursts, with three chimes in each burst.
Now I'm deathly afraid that all the new hardware I just bought may be damaged along with the new drive and my old drive. Did I in-fact do something that could have likely damaged the hardware of the machine? My gut tells me that BIOS flash would not result in hardware damage, but it makes no sense why the bios won't at least display a screen and tell me there are errors. At this point, my stomach is on the floor as I'm seeing the $800 I just spent go up in flames.
I guess my next move, if I can't recover from this, will be to buy a new motherboard and CPU, which I had planned to do anyway, but there's no sense in it now if the hardware I just bought is fried...
Any help is greatly appreciated...
I ran a ram test that I downloaded from the windows site and it resulted in no errors. So naturally i though that perhaps I had a bad platter in my hard drive. So I elected to upgrade the ram along with the hard drive, which then led me to a video card update, which then led to a new power supply.
So I get the PSU in the mail and it's dead from the start. Living here in the UK (unfortunately stationed here for too long now) I was forced to buy a 700w PSU on the economy. Little pricey, but it works at least. I installed it with zero errors, powered on and viola.
System specs:
Dell Dimension 9100
NVIDIA GEFORCE 8800 GTS (upgraded from ATI x850XT)
3GB of DDR2 4200 ram (upgraded from factory default of 1GB)
pentium 4 w HT (next to be upgraded)
700w PSU (upgraded from factory default of 375w)
After installing the new hardware everything worked great, except my ide controller now woulnd't recognize my two cd drives. After fighting with this thing for hours, switching jumpers, going to a USB cd and still get a "no boot device available" error, I thoguht perhaps a BIOS flash was in order. No matter what I tried, I couldn't get the system to boot off the internal cd (because it never recognized it) nor would it access the USB cd even though it saw it in BIOS.
So I downloaded the latest BIOS from dell and flashed it from within windows. Now, the system turns on for about a second, then powers off and then powers back on after about a 3 second delay. No video is displayed and the cpu fan engages in all out whaling mode and the system emits a series of grinding beeps in a series of two bursts, with three chimes in each burst.
Now I'm deathly afraid that all the new hardware I just bought may be damaged along with the new drive and my old drive. Did I in-fact do something that could have likely damaged the hardware of the machine? My gut tells me that BIOS flash would not result in hardware damage, but it makes no sense why the bios won't at least display a screen and tell me there are errors. At this point, my stomach is on the floor as I'm seeing the $800 I just spent go up in flames.
I guess my next move, if I can't recover from this, will be to buy a new motherboard and CPU, which I had planned to do anyway, but there's no sense in it now if the hardware I just bought is fried...
Any help is greatly appreciated...