Originally posted by: Skoorb
Probably lockup.
Originally posted by: SagaLore
You'll permanently damage the motherboard and/or card.
Originally posted by: FelixDeKat
Well, if what I saw happened when someone didnt fully remove a ram stick all the way - you could short out the board and cause the power supply to burn, the pci component gold contacts to burn and the motherboard connecter to melt and burn as well.
Been there, done that.![]()
It's entirely capable of doing so... As long as your motherboard supports it. And you won't find support for hot-swap PCI outside of high-end server boards.Originally posted by: vi_edit
Wasn't Win2k *supposed* to have the ability to shut down the power to PCI slots so that you could do hot swaps?
Whatever came of that?
Originally posted by: vi_edit
Wasn't Win2k *supposed* to have the ability to shut down the power to PCI slots so that you could do hot swaps?
Whatever came of that?
Originally posted by: Viper GTS
Originally posted by: vi_edit
Wasn't Win2k *supposed* to have the ability to shut down the power to PCI slots so that you could do hot swaps?
Whatever came of that?
Hot swappable PCI is commonplace in servers, as are hot swappable CPUs.
Viper GTS
Originally posted by: Xiety
Originally posted by: Viper GTS
Originally posted by: vi_edit
Wasn't Win2k *supposed* to have the ability to shut down the power to PCI slots so that you could do hot swaps?
Whatever came of that?
Hot swappable PCI is commonplace in servers, as are hot swappable CPUs.
Viper GTS
you can hot swap CPUs? :Q
Originally posted by: shenaniganz
If your so curious why don't you just do it.![]()
Originally posted by: OffTopic
You can hot swap PCI/IDE/SCSI devices even on non hot swap able mobo, and doing so is risking your hardware. I have hot swaped solid state dims disk-on-chip, bios, pci vid cards, pci/isa sounds, pci/isa network cards, pci/isa modems, IDE/SCSI hdds & floppies.
The thruth is that is doesn't make my dick any longer because I can do so, and it has killed 1 bios & 1 disk-on-chip out of the dozens of experiments that I did.
I have only proven that hot swap can be done on my own machine a few times to prove to my friends that it is possible, however the devices doesn't work or crash the computer & require a cold boot.
The experiments was at done at my old job where I build imbedded firewall system. We sometime would rip apart pix & other systems to see what they use for hardware & hack their OS for comparison to our system & to see what the competitions have. Therefore we have lots of parts to play with when we are bored.
Strange thing that I found in my experiment is that unpluging & replug the same IDE HDD on a computer while it is on doesn't crash the system most of the times. However, floppy drives sometime works & sometime don't. And, all other devices require cold boot inorder for the computer to work. Linux & Unix is much more tolerable with IDE devices than Windows, because you can unmount & remount the system during a swap.
On a related note. CISCO hardware is absolutely crap for hardware because they use mostly Celeron & Pentium processors that required heat sink & a moving fan for cooling, however their proprietor OS is pretty good. As for my old company, they use none moving parts with a CPU that draw only 1.2~2W & a beautiful Linux kernel.