Hey guys! So I was getting error code 90, and I tried troubleshooting by reseating RAM, using only 1 RAM stick, booting without my GPU, taking out the CMOS battery for a solid hour, and nothing I did would fix the error code, and I would not be able to boot. I then got it RMA'd, and they sent me a replacement, and I booted it for the first time since I got it today, but it still gave me the same error code 90, and nothing I did changed anything. Any help would be really appreciated!
Edit: I ended up just getting it RMA'd and got a replacement board, so everything is all good now. Thank you.
Hey guys! So this is the second time this has happened where my PC won't boot anymore after getting a black screen and losing USB power and displays. Before it would just restart the pc after crashing.
First error 90 happened a week ago and i had to do multiple CMOS reset to get it booting again. Motherboard is dying?
Specs:
ASRock Taichi 570 running on firmware 2.70 with 3950x CPU
RTX 3080
32GB G.Skill Trident Z Neo F4-3600C16D-32GTZNC on XMP profile - never had problems.
All temps are fine.
Thanks for the help.
I'm curious because I know this Mobo displays error codes. I just put mine together last night and the display shows 90 bit honestly everything seems to be running fine. Is this indicative of a bigger issue? That code corresponds to chipset initialization error.
Specs: Phantek p400a case Evga 2070 super xc gaming Trident z gskill 32 GB (3600mhz I think and I already did XMP to enable proper read speed) Ryzen 3700x zen2 Thermal take 850w psu Two Samsung evo sad Two traditional terrabyte HDD
Hopefully one of you can shed some light. I'm hoping I'm overthinking and everything is probably fine. In system info and EVGA precision x my hard ware is at least displaying what devices are present
Good news, the board lists the error codes!
Bad news, what the heck do they mean?
The manual says: DXE_BDS_STARTED (Boot Device Selection)
The only advice I saw on line was reset bios and try again but if it's working ok maybe just ignore it?
Did my cmos reset and all is fixed now
I recently got an 11th gen i9-11900, but when I put it in my computer, it does not boo and Dr. Debug show code 00. It works with my previous processor (i7-10100), and persists through reseating. I was originally on BIOS 1.3, so I tried updating to 1.9, which seems the be the latest, but it still does not work.
Is there some trick to it that I'm missing, or is the processor I got a dud?
Complete build: https://pcpartpicker.com/user/EightSeven6/saved/#view=B43Qyc (the case, monitor and CPU cooler are incorrect as I couldn't find mine but I think that's irrelevant)
The mildly annoying issue is that I get a hang on POST code 92 every time I turn it on (I have the POST screen turned on so it's shown on screen). Most of the time it sits there for less than 1 second and moves on. When this happens, I only get the normal 1 short mobo speaker beep (yes I installed the mobo speaker).
On rare occasions only, it completely hangs on POST code 92, and it also gives out 1 long mobo speaker beep.
Now according to the ASRock documentation, this is a GPU issue https://www.asrock.com/support/index.asp?cat=Debug:
The graphics card or iGPU could not be recognized. Please clear CMOS and try re-installing the graphics card. If the problem still exists, please try installing the graphics card in other slots or try other graphics cards.
But, I've tried checking PCI-e and power connections and they're both fine. The card and the entire rest of the PC also works splendid otherwise. I also tried plugging in a different end of the power connector from the PSU.
I did not update the BIOS on the mobo because the version I currently have supported my CPU out of the box. I could fetch the version if that's relevant. I didn't update because even though I know how to, I'm scared shitless of doing it because I don't have any sort of backup power in my house and I have no idea if there will be an outage or not (they're quite frequent in my area) and on top, I'm also kind of an idiot, even though I know a lot about PC's.