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D1226h Hardware Monitor Error

Smartphones More Software Memory Power Supplies Peripherals Displays Automotive PSUs Android Your question Get the answer Tom's Hardware>Forum>Motherboards>Hardware monitor error> Hardware monitor error Tags: Asus Hardware Monitors Motherboards Last response: May 4, 2009 3:10 AM in Motherboards Share ltg2227 May 3, 2009 4:01:05 PM motherboard: Asus P4B-LX Bios: version 1005 processor4 1.5Ghz The problem i'm having is when i first boot up it displays this "Hardware monitor error". The biggest prob. i have is i can't boot from cd drive to do a clean xp install.I went into bios and there is no "halt error(something like that) to disable. temps seems to be ok(nothing in red) although the power supply was replaced a while back. any help would be great! More about : hardware monitor error ltg2227 May 3, 2009 5:31:38 PM as a follow up i went into bios hardware monitor and these are the readings MB temp 41C/105.5F CPU temp 44C/111F CPU fan speed 4218 rpm power fan speed N/A vcore v 1.7v +3.3v 3.2v +5v 5.0v +12v 11.7v -12v 11.9v this is not my normal using pc, just one someone gave me and i'm trying to fix. so trying something is not a big deal. GhislainG a c 511 V Motherboard a c 113 Ĉ ASUS a b C Monitor May 3, 2009 8:12:17 PM Disable any hardware monitor entry for devices that are not available, e.g., the power fan speed, etc. Also make sure that the previous owner didn't incorrectly set a voltage or temperature threshold (if that's available with that motherboard). Related resources A7V600 On Boot-- Hardware Monitor Error - Forum "hardware monitor found an error" - Forum Hardware monitor found an error windows xp - Forum MSI 890gxm-g65 worked 2 weeks now ?hardware error - Forum Hardware Monitor Reports +3.3v as 2.65+- ... Expl please :S - Forum Can't find your answer ? Ask ! Get the answer ltg2227 May 3, 2009 11:49:15 PM Thanks for the reply, I can't disable the powerfan speed option,it is greyed out and won't let me do anything to it. Also i set the "default" settings and that didn't help either. How do you "set a voltage or temp. threshold"? GhislainG a c 511 V Motherboard a c 113 Ĉ ASUS a b C Monitor May 4, 2009 12:04:46 AM Quote:How do you "set a voltage or temp. threshold"? If you don't see it, then it isn't available. Press on each item and ignore it. That should resolve the issue. Then enable each item one at a time to determine which one(s) is(are) out of range. ltg2227 May 4, 2009 12:39:42 AM ok , i will give that a shot and see! ltg2227

techpubs.sgi.com. The (way outdated) SGI FAQ is online at Texas A&M University. Last updated 12 March, 2006, this document is divided up into these sections: s Motherboard Boot EPROM CPU module RAM NVRAM PROM Password Mouse and Keyboard Power supply Graphics boards Dual head graphics option - Updated 20 May, 2000 Video Input Disk drives CDROM drives Partitioning a new disk and installing Irix Monitors and setting the resolution Trying to use an SGI monitor on a PeeCee ? Indy Graphics and CPU benchmarks (From SGI's web site) http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/259330-30-hardware-monitor-error 100BaseT Ethernet cards from Phobos ISDN on the Indy FAQ - by Swift Griggs, note by Christopher Blencowe What's an Indy? The Indy is a Unix workstation built by Silicon Graphics Incorporated of Mountain View, CA. Introduced in 1993, it uses the MIPS CPU (several different CPU modules were shipped by SGI), and runs SGI's Unix operating system called Irix. Irix is mainly AT&T http://www.nekochan.net/reputable/indytech.html SVr4 based, but has many BSD type extensions and utilities. There is a port of Linux for the Indy, but it's horribly incomplete and pretty much not worth bothering with. Get Irix. The Indy has been sold by several companies as an OEM (original equipment manufacturer) product. In Germany, the box is still blue, but the Indy is labeled Siemens/Nixdorf RW410. These are R4000 100 MHz, with all original SGI parts. In the US, Indys may have been sold with a Tandem label, and were black. Here is a picture of a Tandem badged Challenge S along with a picture of the label on the bottom of the unit. The Challenge S is very similar in design to the Indy, and uses many of the same parts, such as the CPU modules, power supply, drives, and RAM. The Challenge S uses a different chassis (no holes cut in the back for keyboard and mouse), and an Indy motherboard with chips unstuffed (missing), like the VINO video, audio, keyboard/mouse interface, etc. Here is some marketing hype for the Indy workstation (from SGI's web site). AUI and 10Base T Ether

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