Asus P5k Green Drivers For Mac
Sorry about the post not being in the FAQ area, I have been reading PAGES of items and not coming across this type of specific issue yet. Ok, I have seen so much on this I had to try myself. Being a LONG time laptop user and MAC user, this was a first. After puting together a fair system (AMD 3200, 2gig, 256mb video, twin 200gig sata drives), GREEN light no fans(any of them), no boot. I soon found out how finiky these things are on psu's.
So out went the Ultra x connect 480w and up to a Master power 520w. I'm giving it 20a on the +12v side and at least 4a on the +5v side.so I brake it down.With NOTHING else drawing power yet (minimum RAm, no CD, basic video and one HHD).no boot still, but that silly green light. Ok, one more time, break it down, redo on all cable, checked for shorts.power it up and.no fan, just that warm glowing green. What am I missing. I have the 20p+4p on the main connected plus the 4p on the 12V ATX.I thought for sure the Master Power 520 would be enought to kick this over? Even just to get a post message?
Any thought for a recent convert? OK, it isn't the PSU. Something else is wrong. I have to assume this is your first build and there are a lot of little mistakes you can make. Please don't be insulted by the following as I have no idea, from your post, of your experience level: 1. Did you install standoffs before mounting the mobo to the case?
Asus P5K-E REV 1.02G LGA775 Motherboard No BP Motherboards for sale from pcbitz next day delivery available UK and international. Sep 27, 2007 - The appearance of the P5K-VM is pretty dull in comparison to other. ASUS provides their usual selection of software utilities for Windows. ASUS two-slot thermal design (ASUS exclusive) ASUS exclusive two-slot thermal design ASUS two-slot thermal design provides better air-flow and lower VGA cards temperature than other brans´ one-slot design, which also ensures better system stability and longer component life cycle.
Is the one stick of RAM in the B1 slot (3rd slot from the CPU)? Did you apply thermal paste to the CPU prior to mounting the Heat Sink Fan unit (HSF) 4. What kind of Hard Disk Drive (HDD) do you have, where is the data cable plugged in and where is the power cable plugged in? Did you try and use both the 4 pin power cable and the multi-pin SATA power cable simultaneously? Please give us all the specifics of the parts you used. CPU type, RAM type, Video card type etc. More details the better.
Have you switched the case pin plugs around? Don't give up quite so quickly. We'll more than likely have you up and running soon and you'll learn a few things too! Merc Modified Lian Li PC 7077A Dual Watercooling Loops Asus P5K Deluxe BIOS 0404 Core 2 Duo Q6600 (v) Max OC 4050MhHz at 1.65v 1 x XFX 8800GTX XXX Watercooled 2 GB Team Xtreme DDR2 800-PC6400 2 x 150gb WD in Raptors in RAID 0 1 x 640 Nov 03, 2005, 09:14pm EST -Re: New to ASUS A8N-SLI Deluxe NO BOOT, silly green light, 3rd PSU. Correct Merc. I'm a laptop and apps techie more than a hardware type. PRE-BUILT has been my history.
As for your questions: 1. Did you install standoffs before mounting the mobo to the case? -YES as specified.
Is the one stick of RAM in the B1 slot (3rd slot from the CPU)? -FIrst I populated all slots, then just b1 3. Did you apply thermal paste to the CPU prior to mounting the Heat Sink Fan unit (HSF) -Yes 4. What kind of Hard Disk Drive (HDD) do you have, where is the data cable plugged in and where is the power cable plugged in? -160gig baraccuda 4a.Did you try and use both the 4 pin power cable and the multi-pin SATA power cable simultaneously? -Yes (opps?
New to sata) 5. Please give us all the specifics of the parts you used. CPU type, RAM type, Video card type etc. More details the better.RAM Kingston KVR400X6463a/512 (4 identical sticks) -HD 160gig Model ST (segate) ST3160827AS -Video Radeon x600 Pro 256ddr (PCI express), just one -power MasterPower MG520SC -CPU AMD3200 factory kit with heatsink/fan 6. Have you switched the case pin plugs around? -they are keyed, only one way they fit.
Using the 24pin and the seperate 4 pin by the CPU. There must be something simple. A+B=C, right What would be the BARE MINUMIM for me to get a post signal rather than the green LED? I even had it to just MOBO and PSU, same result, not even the FAN. Could this be a grounding issue?
Thanks again for the feedback. Nov 03, 2005, 09:42pm EST -Edited: Nov 04, 2005, 06:43am EST Re: New to ASUS A8N-SLI Deluxe NO BOOT, silly green light, 3rd PSU. Scott- By hooking both the 4 pin molex and the SATA power up to the HDD simultaneously you may have damaged the HDD. Do you have another you can use just to get your system up and running?
By the case plugs I mean the ones that hook up to the front of the case and read HDD LED/ PWR SWITCH/ etc. These are sometimes coded ass-backwards and need to be reversed.
What you need to do is get to the BIOS and make sure that your mobo, CPU, RAM, video card and PSU are good to go. Here is a little guide I wrote up to help you troubleshoot and get your systemm to post: PS: BTW the green LED is a good thing.
It means your PSU and mobo are working at some level You are going to have to do a barebones setup and test each component. This will read a lot harder than it actually is. The initial procedure takes only around 10-15 minutes. The follow on troubleshooting may take a lot longer though. Also, please do not skip steps. Do everything in order and as listed or your troubleshooting will be flawed. Caution: Please remember that turning a PC off does not mean there is no power going through it.
Modern systems maintain a trickle of power to keep the standby functions running. You either have to turn off the switch on the Power Supply Unit (PSU) itself or unplug the system from the wall. Unplugging is best. If you have a LED on the mobo that is lighted all the time. Make sure it is out before proceeding.
Also, be aware of static. Make sure you wear and ESD strap or discharge yourself on a steel part of the case before touching anything inside. First, unplug the PC from the wall and then open it up. Disconnect all the drives (floppy, CDROM, DVD etc.)from the motherboard (mobo) and also disconnect your Hard Drive(s) from the mobo. Do not leave the hard drives connected. The system will boot into BIOS just fine with no hard drive attached.
Unplug the power from all those drives you disconnected from the mobo. Remember to disconnect the front panel firewire and/or USB ports. Next, remove all the RAM, except for one stick, from the mobo.
Some mobos are very picky about where the RAM needs to be placed so make sure the one stick of RAM is in the correct slot as per your manual. Now you are stripped down to a barebones system.
The PSU, the mobo itself, 1 stick of RAM, the CPU/HSF and video card. Reset your CMOS/BIOS while the system is stripped down, unplugged and open. You do this by removing the battery and then moving a jumper near the battery around. Usually there are a set of three pins with two covered by a jumper. You move the jumper from pins 1&2 to pins 2&3 and let it set for a few minutes then reset the jumper to pins 1&2 and replace the battery.
CMOS and BIOS will be back at default settings after doing this. Now check that everything is seated correctly, both the 4 pin and 20 or 24 pin power is connected and secure and if so then plug the PC back into the wall and make sure that any LEDs that should be lighted on the mobo are lighted. If all is still well then turn it on.
Hopefully she boots right back into BIOS. If you get back into BIOS you can start troubleshooting by turning the PC off and unplugging it and reconnecting peripherals one at a time. The idea here is to connect and reboot until something hangs your system up This presumably is the bad piece of gear. If you cant get into BIOS and have the same problem as before then you know it is either the PSU, the RAM, the CPU, the mobo itself or the video card. Change out each these until you get into BIOS. I would start at the PSU as it is usually the guilty party in a situation like this and is also easy to change in and out you are down to just 2 plugs now remember).
Next up would be the video card and/or RAM and if still no luck then things get hard as you now have to consider either the CPU or the mobo. Good luck and happy hunting. Merc Modified Lian Li PC 7077A Dual Watercooling Loops Asus P5K Deluxe BIOS 0404 Core 2 Duo Q6600 (v) Max OC 4050MhHz at 1.65v 1 x XFX 8800GTX XXX Watercooled 2 GB Team Xtreme DDR2 800-PC6400 2 x 150gb WD in Raptors in RAID 0 1 x 640 Nov 03, 2005, 10:09pm EST -Re: New to ASUS A8N-SLI Deluxe NO BOOT, silly green light, 3rd PSU.
I'm a First-Time builder with a similar problem, except when I powered up my new PC everthing in the case seems to work, but nothing appears on the monitor. The green light is on, all 6 case fans run along with the PSU fan, the chipset fan, and the videocard fan. I had everything connected on 1st boot. Nothing on monitor. Disconected everthing, reset CMOS.
Connected Video card, keyboard, and monitor. Matrox convert dvi plus scan converter for mac. Same result booted with nothing on monitor. The case speaker makes a 5-8 second buzzing sound about 10 seconds after powering up the pc. Any Help/Ideas will be greatly appreciated. I've been buying parts for 6wks and have high hopes for the day I successfully boot this baby up. AMD 3500+(Venice) w/factory Heatsink Antec Neo HE550 Asus A8N-SLI Deluxe Western Digital 250GB SATA 1GB (2x512)Kingston Hyper-X PC3200 in slots A1 and B1 Sapphire X800GTO2 256MB PCI Express 2 Optical: Lite-On DVD-Rom and NEC 16XBurner Nov 04, 2005, 06:21am EST -Edited: Nov 04, 2005, 06:21am EST Re: New to ASUS A8N-SLI Deluxe NO BOOT, silly green light, 3rd PSU.
I tried the above and no picture. However, I put a cheap 8MB PCI (1X) in and it worked first try (I left the X800GTO2 in the PCIx16 slot). I installed Windows XP Professional with SP2. I then inserted the NVIDIA nForce 4 Motherboard CD (Rev.99.01) I proceeded to install all of the drivers and software from the disk. My BIOS is version 1011. I went to Device Manager and my X800GTO2 is non-existant.
The cheap card is the only one listed. My very uneducated guess is either the Card is bad, the card is incompatible, or something is wrong with the motherboard. I am also having problems with my Cable Modem. I installed both LAN drivers and they appear in my Taskbar. I am about to download new drivers on my old PC and try flashing the newest BIOS and Chipset drivers.
Maybe this will fix all of my problems! (More info about my PC/Possible problems) I now have both video cards installed. I have not tried plugging in a 4-Pin power next to the Video Card.
Newegg.com - A great place to buy computers, computer parts, electronics, software, accessories, and DVDs online. With great prices, fast shipping, and top-rated customer service - Newegg shopping upgraded ™ If you are reading this message, Please to reload this page.(Do not use your browser's 'Refresh' button). Please if you're running the latest version of your browser and you still see this message. If you see this message, your web browser doesn't support JavaScript or JavaScript is disabled. Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings so Newegg.com can function correctly. Model Brand ASUS Model P5K PRO Supported CPU LGA 775 CPU Type Core 2 Quad / Core 2 Extreme / Core 2 Duo FSB 1333/1066 MHz Chipsets Intel P35 South Bridge Intel ICH9R Onboard Video None Memory Number of Memory Slots 4×240pin Memory Standard DDR2 1066 Maximum Memory Supported 8GB Dual Channel Expansion Slots PCI Express x16 2 x PCIe x16 (blue @ x16 mode, black @ x4 or x1 mode) supports CrossFire Technology PCI Express x1 2 x PCI Express x1 PCI Slots 2 x PCI Slots Storage Devices PATA 1 x ATA100 2 Dev.
Asus P5k E
Pros: Very Fine board and runs great after Fixes. I experienced problems with 2 GB X 4 DDR2 memory. I ran a bios upgrade and that fixed that problem. I am running 8 gb now fine. It initionally kept loosing all USB ports, even on the case as well as the on the board.
They just stopped functioning. I diagnosed the problem as a USB driver problem. I had a card called Buslink, a cheap PCI card with 5 USB inputs. I installed that card with the software which added the Usb 2.0 controller software that it needed. Problem disappeared. The boards USB ports now worked and so did the case USB ports.
Everything solved. Cons: Cons, I have none. I use this board each and every day and have never seen a blue screen after the bios upgrade and the USB controller problem fix, during my first week of ownership. Other Thoughts: I use this board with an Intel retail boxed 3.0 ghtz dual core CPU and 8 gb of memory.
Highly reliable and exrtreemely dependable. I highly recommend this board, it runs cool and it is first rate. Also, I might add I run windows XP with latest upgrades installed. Pros: To all the other ppl out there that are haveing probs telling ppl not to buy it.
But im sorry i have had this mb for almost a year now.and i havent had any probs. I have a e2180 overclocked to 3.5GHz runing fine. Idle 29.c max 49.c with CORSAIR ValueSelect 2gb ram timed at 5-5-5-15 and a 8400gs overclocked and it all plays gta4 30+fps Cons: well. When you crossfire it drops the x16 down and your 2ed card runs at x4. It shares the x16. Other Thoughts: i have never had any probs.
Overclocked really easy. And i am thinking about buying a 2ed one. Pros: Lots of features for a low price Just loook at the details Cons: With every bargain there comes a cost and with this one it is the motherboard itself.
I cannot boot my system without having it drained of electricity first for a few minutes (ie unplugged), otherwise the boot process hangs with the 4870 spinning at full throtle no boot no post nothing. Other Thoughts: This system was tested with a different power supply and different RAM and it still hangs. If unplugged between usage everything boots and runs fine which means it is not the video card.
This board will have to be replaced soon. Looking at a Gigabyte. The following guidelines apply to all product categories unless otherwise indicated within specific categories. New: This means the product will ship as received by the manufacturer, sealed, with all advertised components, and with the manufacturer warranty. Refurbished: This means the product was tested and repaired as required to meet the standards of the refurbisher, which may or may not be the original manufacturer. Any exceptions to the condition of the item outside the manufacturer’s information should be provided in the listing, up to and including warranty details. Open Box: Newegg only guarantees your receipt of the Open Box product with the purchase of this item.
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Asus P5k Se Drivers
Used - Acceptable: This means that the product shows clear signs of use, cosmetic defect, and may be missing minor accessories and manual, but remain in working condition. Product does not come with warranty unless stated otherwise in product description. Functionality issues beyond signs of use should be disclosed in product description.