Can't see why a change in a BIOS setting would cause a 5 beep error code which is as you know a CPU problem.
Could just be coincidental that it happened at the same time.
* Try a power refresh and check if that works in case the BIOS was corrupted. Disconnect the power to the PSU and then remove the coin cell battery from the motherboard. ''Press and hold the Power On button for a full 30 seconds and then release it.'' Reinsert the coin cell battery (+ve on top) reconnect the power to the PSU and try turning the PC on
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* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard with CPU, ram, GPU card (if no integrated graphics), PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on and check if you can get into BIOS.
+
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard with CPU, ram, GPU card (if no integrated graphics), PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no CD/DVD drive, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on and check if you can get into BIOS.
* Do the [link|http://support.antec.com/support/solutions/articles/1000015319-is-my-power-supply-dead-the-paperclip-test|paperclip test] on the PSU to make sure that all the voltage supplies are OK
If still no good you may need the [link|http://teknisi-indonesia.com/resources/gigabyte-h310m-s2p-2-0-rev1-0-schematic-and-boardview.16198/|schematics] (only one I could find online)
Can't see why a change in a BIOS setting would cause a 5 beep error code which is as you know a CPU problem.
Could just be coincidental that it happened at the same time.
* Try a power refresh and check if that works in case the BIOS was corrupted. Disconnect the power to the PSU and then remove the coin cell battery from the motherboard. ''Press and hold the Power On button for a full 30 seconds and then release it.'' Reinsert the coin cell battery (+ve on top) reconnect the power to the PSU and try turning the PC on
-
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard with CPU, ram, GPU card (if no integrated graphics), PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on.
+
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard with CPU, ram, GPU card (if no integrated graphics), PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on and check if you can get into BIOS.
* Do the [link|http://support.antec.com/support/solutions/articles/1000015319-is-my-power-supply-dead-the-paperclip-test|paperclip test] on the PSU to make sure that all the voltage supplies are OK
If still no good you may need the [link|http://teknisi-indonesia.com/resources/gigabyte-h310m-s2p-2-0-rev1-0-schematic-and-boardview.16198/|schematics] (only one I could find online)
Can't see why a change in a BIOS setting would cause a 5 beep error code which is as you know a CPU problem.
Could just be coincidental that it happened at the same time.
* Try a power refresh and check if that works in case the BIOS was corrupted. Disconnect the power to the PSU and then remove the coin cell battery from the motherboard. ''Press and hold the Power On button for a full 30 seconds and then release it.'' Reinsert the coin cell battery (+ve on top) reconnect the power to the PSU and try turning the PC on
-
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard with CPU, ram, GPU card (if required), PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on.
+
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard with CPU, ram, GPU card (if no integrated graphics), PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on.
* Do the [link|http://support.antec.com/support/solutions/articles/1000015319-is-my-power-supply-dead-the-paperclip-test|paperclip test] on the PSU to make sure that all the voltage supplies are OK
If still no good you may need the [link|http://teknisi-indonesia.com/resources/gigabyte-h310m-s2p-2-0-rev1-0-schematic-and-boardview.16198/|schematics] (only one I could find online)
Can't see why a change in a BIOS setting would cause a 5 beep error code which is as you know a CPU problem.
Could just be coincidental that it happened at the same time.
* Try a power refresh and check if that works in case the BIOS was corrupted. Disconnect the power to the PSU and then remove the coin cell battery from the motherboard. ''Press and hold the Power On button for a full 30 seconds and then release it.'' Reinsert the coin cell battery (+ve on top) reconnect the power to the PSU and try turning the PC on
-
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard with CPU (if required), ram, GPU card, PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on.
+
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard with CPU , ram, GPU card (if required), PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on.
* Do the [link|http://support.antec.com/support/solutions/articles/1000015319-is-my-power-supply-dead-the-paperclip-test|paperclip test] on the PSU to make sure that all the voltage supplies are OK
If still no good you may need the [link|http://teknisi-indonesia.com/resources/gigabyte-h310m-s2p-2-0-rev1-0-schematic-and-boardview.16198/|schematics] (only one I could find online)
Can't see why a change in a BIOS setting would cause a 5 beep error code which is as you know a CPU problem.
Could just be coincidental that it happened at the same time.
* Try a power refresh and check if that works in case the BIOS was corrupted. Disconnect the power to the PSU and then remove the coin cell battery from the motherboard. ''Press and hold the Power On button for a full 30 seconds and then release it.'' Reinsert the coin cell battery (+ve on top) reconnect the power to the PSU and try turning the PC on
-
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard with CPU, ram, GPU card, PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on.
+
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard with CPU (if required), ram, GPU card, PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on.
* Do the [link|http://support.antec.com/support/solutions/articles/1000015319-is-my-power-supply-dead-the-paperclip-test|paperclip test] on the PSU to make sure that all the voltage supplies are OK
If still no good you may need the [link|http://teknisi-indonesia.com/resources/gigabyte-h310m-s2p-2-0-rev1-0-schematic-and-boardview.16198/|schematics] (only one I could find online)
Can't see why a change in a BIOS setting would cause a 5 beep error code which is as you know a CPU problem.
Could just be coincidental that it happened at the same time.
* Try a power refresh and check if that works in case the BIOS was corrupted. Disconnect the power to the PSU and then remove the coin cell battery from the motherboard. ''Press and hold the Power On button for a full 30 seconds and then release it.'' Reinsert the coin cell battery (+ve on top) reconnect the power to the PSU and try turning the PC on
-
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard, ram, GPU card, PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on.
-
* Do the [http://support.antec.com/support/solutions/articles/1000015319-is-my-power-supply-dead-the-paperclip-test|paperclip test] on the PSU to make sure that all the voltage supplies are OK
-
-
If still no good you may need the [http://teknisi-indonesia.com/resources/gigabyte-h310m-s2p-2-0-rev1-0-schematic-and-boardview.16198/|schematics] (only one I could find online)
+
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard with CPU, ram, GPU card, PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on.
+
* Do the [link|http://support.antec.com/support/solutions/articles/1000015319-is-my-power-supply-dead-the-paperclip-test|paperclip test] on the PSU to make sure that all the voltage supplies are OK
+
If still no good you may need the [link|http://teknisi-indonesia.com/resources/gigabyte-h310m-s2p-2-0-rev1-0-schematic-and-boardview.16198/|schematics] (only one I could find online)
@jfmer6
Can't see why a change in a BIOS setting would cause a 5 beep error code which is as you know a CPU problem.
Could just be coincidental that it happened at the same time.
* Try a power refresh and check if that works in case the BIOS was corrupted. Disconnect the power to the PSU and then remove the coin cell battery from the motherboard. ''Press and hold the Power On button for a full 30 seconds and then release it.'' Reinsert the coin cell battery (+ve on top) reconnect the power to the PSU and try turning the PC on
* Create a barebones PC and check i.e. motherboard, ram, GPU card, PSU, monitor and keyboard only - disconnect everything else i.e. no HDD/SSD, no other cards, no external peripherals etc and then try turning it on.
* Do the [http://support.antec.com/support/solutions/articles/1000015319-is-my-power-supply-dead-the-paperclip-test|paperclip test] on the PSU to make sure that all the voltage supplies are OK
If still no good you may need the [http://teknisi-indonesia.com/resources/gigabyte-h310m-s2p-2-0-rev1-0-schematic-and-boardview.16198/|schematics] (only one I could find online)