10-06-2017 03:03 AM - last edited on 03-05-2024 09:52 PM by ROGBot
10-06-2017 03:14 AM
Tavsalli wrote:
Hi, I have the Asus Crosshair VI Hero motherboard. My computer is working stable. But when the power cuts off, the computer is locked in the ASUS logo. Qcode Od, The problem is solved when I restart the computer several times. If the problem is not resolved, I'm resetting Bios. After a bit of trouble, the problem gets out of the way. There is not cold start. After the system is turned on, it is working stably.
Bios Version: 1701
Ram Frequency: 2933 mhz Docp Standart
Processor not overclocked
System İnformation
Asus Crosshair VI Hero
Ryzen 1800 x
Corsair 16 gb 3000 mhz *2 ram
Asus Gtx 1070
Sound Blaster Zx
Corsair Rm1000x
Nzxt Kraken x62
Corsair commander link
Samsung ssd etc.
10-06-2017 03:03 PM
10-14-2017 04:44 AM
10-14-2017 09:14 AM
10-14-2017 08:51 PM
Mete Gokturk wrote:
I really admire the solution here.
- The sound outputs are very noisy. Solution: Buy a new sound card.
- The system gives 0D error when booting. Solution: Buy a new UPS.
Then how about we do that? We buy a new motherboard ?!
10-14-2017 09:57 AM
10-14-2017 02:58 PM
Korth wrote:
"Problem of electricity interruption" is not a motherboard issue, lol.
Sudden power failure, hard shutdown on motherboard, Q-Code 0D halt (important volatile state data electrically scrambled somewhere in RAM, CPU, PCH or chipset, PCIe or VGA device, or runtime firmware) which persists for several reset attempts before it successfully reboots.
Not good for these components but not terribly harmful unless it recurs frequently. It does gradually but permanently harm NVRAM - SSD performance, capacity, reliability, and longevity are reduced a little each time it happens. It causes permanent loss of data, which might be trivial or might be precious. It makes Windows unhappy and can cause OS instability. It wastes time.
The proper solution is a UPS. It's not about buying another piece of hardware to workaround a bad system, it's about buying a piece of hardware "missing" from an otherwise working system. Not a luxury but a necessity if you use your computer somewhere with unreliable electrical service.
If nothing else, a decent UPS pays for itself by costing less than the SSD drive(s) you'd otherwise need to replace over the next few years.
Whatever you do, it's prudent to make full backup images of your system. And extract your Windows Product Key, write it down somewhere safe, before the operating system breaks and you need it.
10-14-2017 08:12 PM
10-14-2017 08:54 PM
lightknightrr wrote:
+1 Seriously. I'm slowly moving even non-essential systems (like the LCD monitors, and speaker systems...portable telephones...laser printer is too far for for now) to UPSs. I like it when my monitor doesn't flicker, or go out for 5 seconds occasionally, and I'm sure my electronics appreciate that as well.