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April 15th, 2006, 02:15 AM
#1
Strange Beeping sound
So i was seeing what type of ram my computer had, and i took it out, had a look, and replaced it.
I turned it back on and BEEP BEEP noises from everywhere!
I then smelt it and it smelt burning.
Then today I opened it up and had a look, the fans are both working, but it may be getting hot at a central point (I haven't found it yet)
Here's a video of the sound.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=D74PK0q01D4
Can somebody please help, I just bought $250 worth of wireless networking gear and then this happens.
Specs:
40GB HDD
A-open ATX-250 Gt PSU
Geforce 2 Mx turbo (maybe...)
512 SDRAM
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April 15th, 2006, 06:03 AM
#2
The ram is not seated properly and /or you bumped the video card and it not fully seated.
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April 15th, 2006, 06:54 AM
#3
Shall test and get back to you, thanks for help
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April 15th, 2006, 08:37 AM
#4
No it still hasn't fixed the problem
Everything is latched in correctly (Or so it seems) and the same thing still happens.
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April 15th, 2006, 08:50 AM
#5
Suggestion: Start with the basics. Disconnect everything. Then hookup the Power Supply, Motherboard, CPU, RAM, Video Card, Floppy Drive (if available), Keyboard and Monitor. Does it try to boot now?
Note: It doesn't matter if it says it can't find an Operating System. Is it attempting to bootup without the repeated beeping noise?
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April 15th, 2006, 08:53 AM
#6
Ditto on the above, and did you ground yourself before touching the RAM stick? static electricity in your body can damage components instantly, and all you would need to check RAM specs (And everything else in your system) would be a program like Everest Home Edition (In my signature) which is a lot easier than opening up your case. 
Liam
Desktop:I5 2500K|Asus P8Z68-V|8GB Corsair Vengeance|1280MB Nvidia 560 TI PE|1TB Seagate/60GB OCZ SSD|LG Blu-ray Writer|Corsair 750W
27" iMac:I5 2500S|12GB Crucial DDR3|ATI 1GB 6970|1TB|Superdrive|Mighty Mouse 
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April 15th, 2006, 09:25 AM
#7
How would I know if the components have been damaged by Static?
Would they just not work.
The only thing i'm worried about is my harddrive as it has numerous amounts of graphical art work and websites that are in construction for clients. Haven't backed up in about a month
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April 15th, 2006, 09:35 AM
#8
You could slave the hard drive to another system and back up what you want, or if we can get the problem sorted with the beeping then it should be okay to just leave the hard drive as it is.
Do you have 1 x 512mb stick of RAM in the system? or is it 2 x 256mb sticks? if it is the latter then open up the case, and touch a metal part of the case with both hands to ground yourself, and remove one stick, place it on a wooden desk/table, and try to boot, and then switch the sticks, if it is 512mb then the only option would be to replace the stick with an identical SD RAM stick and see if the beeping stops, it would be the most likely solution as you removed the stick and are now getting beep code errors.....unfortunately.
Liam
Desktop:I5 2500K|Asus P8Z68-V|8GB Corsair Vengeance|1280MB Nvidia 560 TI PE|1TB Seagate/60GB OCZ SSD|LG Blu-ray Writer|Corsair 750W
27" iMac:I5 2500S|12GB Crucial DDR3|ATI 1GB 6970|1TB|Superdrive|Mighty Mouse 
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April 15th, 2006, 10:52 AM
#9
You can also try gently cleaning the conatcts of the RAM modules with a pencil eraser, you may hava bit of dirt causing a bad contact.
Nick.
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