Gigabyte Motherboard Beeping

Krackerjax

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Hello all. I have a Gigabyte Gaming 7 motherboard: https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128835

And my CPU is an Intel 6700K: https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819117559&cm_re=intel_6700k-_-19-117-559-_-Product

Anyways, my motherboard has been beeping at seemingly random intervals while running for the last few weeks. But I built this PC over a month ago, so its strange that it chose to make sounds all of a sudden even though nothing has changed.

I looked up the beep codes for my mobo, but it doesnt seem to help because the beeps are so random. 1 beep, 2 beeps, 3 beeps, 5 beeps, 9 beeps, 11 beeps. It has no consistency. Or so I thought.

I believe I have narrowed it down to one related issue: CPU. But no, its not overheating, at max load the highest it went was 73C (I know not ideal but within acceptable parameters). I had my bios voltage set to default, which was 1.275v. But I was told it should be at 1.200v, so I lowered it to that in the BIOS. And my temps went down to 58C at max loads! Quite a difference. Also set my mind at ease that maybe my cooler or paste were malfunctioning.

Anyways, I tell you this because my beeps seemed to be random at times, but the main constant? When my voltage/temps of the CPU spiked or throttled. Every time I opened a graphically intensive game, I would get beeps almost non stop, at random numbers as I previously stated. When I made that initial change from 1.275v to 1.2000v, I tested it with a game and I heard no beeps at all (I thought I had fixed my issue). But then the next time I open the very same game, after a few minutes sure enough I had a set of beeps again. And I had HWMonitror open and it says my VID was going as high as 1.384v.

I am fairly certain the beeps are related to increased voltage, but I dont know WHY that would make it beep. Isn't 1.384 under heavy load acceptable? Also why is my voltage going that high if I set it to 1.200v? I am not experienced with voltages and overclocking and I just want a stable, un-overclocked CPU (I know I bought an unlocked one).

So either I need to fix the voltage to satisfy my mobo, or perhaps somehow I can disable the beeping, or even perhaps its a false beep and means nothing, as everything seems to look okay; Ive heard mobos can do such things.

Any help would be appreciated, thanks.
 
Solution
I just saw you posted the voltages. The PSU looks fine.
So you should try use the minimum hardware, one stick RAM, onboard iGPU, only the SSD or HDD with windows OS, and run the PC to see you still have those beeps.

Krackerjax

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Hi there, thanks for the reply.

My GPU is an EVGA GeForce GTX 1070. MY PSU is a 1000W Antec.

The beeping does not do anything to my PC. It runs perfectly fine while beeping, I can play games while it beeps even. It is even beeping as I write this reply right now.

Sorry, but I do not know what the SMART is. I see nothing like that in HWMonitor.

And finally, are the +3.3V, +5V, and +12V in regards to the motherboard voltages? That is the only place I see something like that in HWMonitor. If that is what you mean, then here are the numbers for those:

+3.3V: Min- 1.968V Max- 2.016V
+5V: Min- 3.347V Max- 3.367V
+12V: Min- 0.048V Max-0.048V

I do not know what these mean exactly, as I am not knowledgeable when it comes to voltages.
 
Do you update your MB drivers? like the chipset, intel ME, audio, network, etc

Those voltages do not look good, but I think the MB does not have the newer drivers for the sensors so that it shows that bad numbers, which may cause your MB beeps. And the antec 1000w is good one, so update the drivers, check the voltages number again, you should be fine. After that clear the CMOS, boot the PC and use it to see the MB will beep or not.

The S.M.A.R.T. will be under the hard driver section for either the SSD or regular HDD.
 

Krackerjax

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I am fairly sure my MB drivers are up to date, as I just installed them last month. But I will double check and download all the latest versions and see if they are newer than what I currently have.

And I did clear my CMOS and reboot last night. I still had beeps afterwards.

And in HWMonitor I have no SMART at all. My SSD and HDD sections only display temperatures, air flow, and utilization.
 
If the MB has newer chipset driver, that go into the BIOS something like the hardware monitor or pc health section to recheck those voltages, if they are the same, and the PSU may have problem.

Do you oc the i7? If you did, when you lower the cpu voltage, it may cause the pc unstable.
 

Krackerjax

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I have not overclocked anything, no.

I am now worried it could be the PSU. I have had this thing for almost 10 years, its very old. But how do I check to make sure it is the problem? I dont know how to check the status of a PSU.
 
Your reliance on third party software, HWMonitror, is not something I would put a lot of trust in. Some of these software programs have to report a number even if it doesn't work with a particular sensor or product.

PC Health Status lists voltages in BIOS (see page 53 of downloadable manual for photo).

GIGABYTE System Information Viewer (Easy Tune)
System Alerts tab allows you to monitor hardware temperature, voltage and fan speed, and set temperature/fan speed alarm.

Some people install a lot of apps and utilities because their on the software disk that came with the motherboard without knowing what they do.
 

Krackerjax

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Fair enough. I only install things when I know what they do though, trust me.

I actually have System Information Viewer installed. And it gave me what I assume is more desirable information:

+3.3V: 3.32438V

+5V: 5.01V

+12V: 12.096V

Though I still dont know what this pertains to or the importance of it.