Tom's Hardware > Forum > Motherboards & Memory > Gigabyte > [Solved] GIGABYTE GA-MA770T-UD3P

[Solved] GIGABYTE GA-MA770T-UD3P

Forum Motherboards & Memory : Gigabyte - [Solved] GIGABYTE GA-MA770T-UD3P

Tom's Hardware: Over 1.4 million members in 6 different countries available to answer all your high-tech questions. Sign up now! Its free!

Best answer from bilbat.

Word :    Username :           
 

I am putting together a desktop made from entirely new parts from newegg.com.

Parts are as follows:
Monitor: Acer X193Wbd Black 19" 5ms Widescreen LCD Monitor
Ram:G.SKILL 4GB (2 x 2GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3
Video card:XFX HD-487A-ZWFC Radeon HD 4870 1GB
DVD/CD:LITE-ON 24X DVD+R SATA Black 24X DVD Writer - Retail
HardDrive:Seagate Barracuda LP ST3500412AS 500GB
CPU:AMD Athlon II X4 630 Propus 2.8GHz
Case & PSU:Rosewill Conqueror RPS-01-WB500P Triple 120mm Fans Steel ATX Mid tower Computer Case with 500W Power Supply - Retail
MOBO: GIGABYTE GA-MA770T-UD3P

I've put it all together and it won't give any display.
I'll be working on it tomorrow and see if I get any beeps(didn't have any speakers or headphones when I was attempting)
I have tried taking the video card out and putting back in. Same with the ram.
Any conflicts with the items that I don't know about would be helpful. ;/

Mind you, there are two ways to do this: you can do it either in or out of the case. The advantages and drawbacks: in the case is easier and faster, but will not find case-related problems, like shorts from extra, mispositioned standoffs, or ground plane problems; out of the case takes longer, and you may run into 'reach' problems - power supply cables and front panel power switch headers may not be long enough; for the power supply, it's usually just a matter of removing four screws to temorarily relocate it; for the power switch, you can just do this (carefully):
http://img200.imageshack.us/img200/7551/power2.jpg
You only need to short the pins momentarily - that's all the power switch does...Out of the case also affords you an easy opportunity to 'flip' the board to check your heatsink/fan attachment setup, to be sure all the pins are fully seated, locked, and not cracked... If you do the out of the case, you need to lay the board on a non-conductive surface: the box the MOBO came in is ideal; but - the foam pad it came with, and the bag it was in are not - being 'antistat', they are somewhat conductive, and may induce problems...

Another item worth mention at this point is case speakers: if you haven't got one - get one!
http://www.cwc-group.com/casp.html
A lot of people operate under the misaprehension that the 'diagnostic beeps' should come through the speakers attached to their sound-card/chip - not so! Your three hundred dollar Altec-Lansings won't do you any good here - you have to have a case speaker attached to the front panel header, and, often by this point, it's the only diagnostic info you'll have to go on...

The standard 'strip-down':

Power down at PSU switch
remove everything except
CPU and heatsink/fan (check carefully that the fan retaining pins are fully inserted, completely locked, and not cracked)
one stick of RAM, in slot closest to CPU
video card and monitor connector (if more than one PCIe slot, again, in slot closest to CPU)
all power plugs - 20+4 or 24, 2x2 or 2x4 ATX power, graphics card power
case speaker and power switch connectors
keyboard (don't need a mouse at this point)
place jumper on RST_CMOS pins
remove jumper from RST_CMOS pins
power up at PSU switch
power up by depressing case power switch (or shorting the 'power' pins...)
If you get video, enter BIOS with <DEL> (may need a <TAB> to get to POST screen, if 'splash' screen is enabled)
Select and execute "Load Optimized Defaults" - save and exit, reboot
power down
reinsert other components, one at a time, testing each time after addition...
Sponsored Links
Register or log in to remove.
Best answer

Mind you, there are two ways to do this: you can do it either in or out of the case. The advantages and drawbacks: in the case is easier and faster, but will not find case-related problems, like shorts from extra, mispositioned standoffs, or ground plane problems; out of the case takes longer, and you may run into 'reach' problems - power supply cables and front panel power switch headers may not be long enough; for the power supply, it's usually just a matter of removing four screws to temorarily relocate it; for the power switch, you can just do this (carefully):
http://img200.imageshack.us/img200/7551/power2.jpg
You only need to short the pins momentarily - that's all the power switch does...Out of the case also affords you an easy opportunity to 'flip' the board to check your heatsink/fan attachment setup, to be sure all the pins are fully seated, locked, and not cracked... If you do the out of the case, you need to lay the board on a non-conductive surface: the box the MOBO came in is ideal; but - the foam pad it came with, and the bag it was in are not - being 'antistat', they are somewhat conductive, and may induce problems...

Another item worth mention at this point is case speakers: if you haven't got one - get one!
http://www.cwc-group.com/casp.html
A lot of people operate under the misaprehension that the 'diagnostic beeps' should come through the speakers attached to their sound-card/chip - not so! Your three hundred dollar Altec-Lansings won't do you any good here - you have to have a case speaker attached to the front panel header, and, often by this point, it's the only diagnostic info you'll have to go on...

The standard 'strip-down':

Power down at PSU switch
remove everything except
CPU and heatsink/fan (check carefully that the fan retaining pins are fully inserted, completely locked, and not cracked)
one stick of RAM, in slot closest to CPU
video card and monitor connector (if more than one PCIe slot, again, in slot closest to CPU)
all power plugs - 20+4 or 24, 2x2 or 2x4 ATX power, graphics card power
case speaker and power switch connectors
keyboard (don't need a mouse at this point)
place jumper on RST_CMOS pins
remove jumper from RST_CMOS pins
power up at PSU switch
power up by depressing case power switch (or shorting the 'power' pins...)
If you get video, enter BIOS with <DEL> (may need a <TAB> to get to POST screen, if 'splash' screen is enabled)
Select and execute "Load Optimized Defaults" - save and exit, reboot
power down
reinsert other components, one at a time, testing each time after addition...


Message edited by bilbat on 10-13-2009 at 04:52:52 PM
Reply to bilbat

Alright!
I followed the guide/s and I still don't know what was wrong but everything seems to be working fine after I resetted the CMOS.
I got it to display on the screen and every time I added the next part it still worked and everything is connected. So I think all problems have left the building.
Perhaps something was only half connected?
Problem solved.

Reply to Tharcide
Tom's Hardware > Forum > Motherboards & Memory > Gigabyte > [Solved] GIGABYTE GA-MA770T-UD3P
Go to:

There are 749 identified and unidentified users. To see the list of identified users, Click here.

Sponsored links
  • Ask the community now
  • Publish
Ad
They won a badge
Join us in greeting them