What motherboards have a button for clearing the CMOS?

t3h l337 n3wb

Platinum Member
Apr 22, 2005
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Now it should be a lot easier to clear CMOS... It was a pain in the @$$ taking the jumper off of the pins on my old mobo (AOpen Socket 370) because it was right next to the IDE cable slot, so there wasn't really much room to maneauver my fingers around the jumper -_-; Just out of curiousity, what other mobos besides the Neo4 Platinum/SLI have a button instead of a jumper for clearing the CMOS?

*EDIT*
Crap, should this be in the motherboards forum? -_-;
 

n7

Elite Member
Jan 4, 2004
21,281
4
81
That's awesome.

I would so love to have a button to reset cmos instead of using teh tweezers every time i need to reset.

The Abit Fatality one also does i believe.
 

Mrvile

Lifer
Oct 16, 2004
14,066
1
0
Whoa sweet! That'll be my next motherboard :thumbsup:

I reset my CMOS most of the time through the BIOS unless it doesn't boot up.
 

pcgeek11

Lifer
Jun 12, 2005
22,387
5,003
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Originally posted by: vailr
The updated Abit AN8 "Fatal1ty" board includes a front case "uGuru" control panel,
including a flip up covered CMOS reset switch. Also has USB & audio ports,
and a temperature monitoring LCD.

My only question is WHY would you have to clear the CMOS so darn much??? I've been working on PC's since 1980 and I have only had to do this maybe 8 or 10 times in all those years.. ???????

You could put a Clear CMOS switch on any PC that has the jumper pins anyway. Just get a small toggle switch SPST and the wire and leads from a front panel LED. connect the leads from the switch and place the connector onto the CMOS Clear pins on the main board, this is if you only have two pins for the clear CMOS Jumper. If you had 3 pins where you actually have to move the jumper from pins 1 and 2 to pins 2 and 3 then you will need a 3 wire connector and a SPDT switch... Just place the switch somewhere like in the back of the PC where it will not get activated by accident.

pcgeek11

 

flexy

Diamond Member
Sep 28, 2001
8,464
155
106
Originally posted by: Arcanedeath
the DFI NF4 series all have a button to reset the cmos and power on the system.


no they have a RESET button, not a "reset/clear CMOS" button.
 

SuperFreaky

Golden Member
Nov 1, 1999
1,985
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Originally posted by: pcgeek11
Originally posted by: vailr
The updated Abit AN8 "Fatal1ty" board includes a front case "uGuru" control panel,
including a flip up covered CMOS reset switch. Also has USB & audio ports,
and a temperature monitoring LCD.

My only question is WHY would you have to clear the CMOS so darn much??? I've been working on PC's since 1980 and I have only had to do this maybe 8 or 10 times in all those years.. ???????

You could put a Clear CMOS switch on any PC that has the jumper pins anyway. Just get a small toggle switch SPST and the wire and leads from a front panel LED. connect the leads from the switch and place the connector onto the CMOS Clear pins on the main board, this is if you only have two pins for the clear CMOS Jumper. If you had 3 pins where you actually have to move the jumper from pins 1 and 2 to pins 2 and 3 then you will need a 3 wire connector and a SPDT switch... Just place the switch somewhere like in the back of the PC where it will not get activated by accident.

pcgeek11


You haven't overclocked a PC in all those years?
 

Some1ne

Senior member
Apr 21, 2005
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My only question is WHY would you have to clear the CMOS so darn much??? I've been working on PC's since 1980 and I have only had to do this maybe 8 or 10 times in all those years.. ???????

1. Because when overclocking, a settings change made it so that the PC will no longer POST, so the CMOS must be manually cleared to get the system booting again.

2. Because a BIOS flash introduced new options/modified existing ones, and it is not compatible with the previous settings, so the CMOS has to be cleared for the system to work again...this has unfortunately happened several times on my MSI Neo4 Platinum, and as convenient as the "clear CMOS" button is, I would rather have the BIOS writers figure out a way to make their new BIOS "translate" the old BIOS settings. I also think I would rather have the feature (I think it's on DFI boards) the lets you save configuration profiles, and also automatically revert to the last stable profile (without clearing the CMOS) when a configuration error prevents the system from POST'ing.
 

Kenazo

Lifer
Sep 15, 2000
10,429
1
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Originally posted by: rise4310
just make your own.

I was just thinking of doing this. Just take a jumper or something and fix it with a switch. Shouldn't be too hard.
 

RichUK

Lifer
Feb 14, 2005
10,341
678
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Originally posted by: n7
That's awesome.

I would so love to have a button to reset cmos instead of using teh tweezers every time i need to reset.

The Abit Fatality one also does i believe.

OMG i know exactely what you mean i end up having to take the NIC out aswell (not using on board Network port),
 

Varun

Golden Member
Aug 18, 2002
1,161
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If I had to reset my CMOS that often I would just make a switch as others have suggested. It would be so easy, anyone could do it really. Though it would cost somewhere in the 50-100 cent area
 

LTC8K6

Lifer
Mar 10, 2004
28,520
1,576
126
Most of the computers I have built used the insert key to set the CMOS to defaults. You held it down during boot.
 

rise

Diamond Member
Dec 13, 2004
9,116
46
91
Originally posted by: Varun
If I had to reset my CMOS that often I would just make a switch as others have suggested. It would be so easy, anyone could do it really. Though it would cost somewhere in the 50-100 cent area

lol, thats a deal breaker! :p