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Posted by Viper on July 28, 2008, 5:58 am
Please log in for more thread options I have a Gigabyte GA-K8nsc-939 board with a AMD 3200+ 64 bit chip. My computer was off but still connected to an outlet backed up with a surge protector when certain electronic equipment was hit with a power spike during a lightning storm. My computer works fine. Except for the USB ports and floppy drive. The on-board NIC, hard drives, operating system (Vista Business), and memory, all operate normally. So far, I cleared the BIOS, re-installed the chipset drivers, deleted the USB drivers and let them reload. It seems the USB drivers re-install even though the ports don't work. I also have a 64 in 1 memory card reader, connected via a IDE onboard controller that is not detected any more also. I tried to do a repair of Vista Business, but the reinstall option is not available in this version of Vista. My thinking is to order a new board and rebuild the system. Also, I have a HP printer that got ruined. Any help would be appreciated. The only thing I have not tried is to re-install Vista Business again but that would wipe out all my programs. I don't know which way to go with my thinking here? Is it the motherboard or Vista? I am pulling towards the motherboard. Any advice would be appreciated. The only question I don't understand, is why would the USB drivers re-load and be seen in the device manager as normal if the ports don't work? Thanks, Comstat -- | |||||||||||||
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Posted by Paul on July 28, 2008, 7:45 am
Please log in for more thread options Well, there already exists a case with exactly those symptoms. The ICH5/ICH5R has a problem, where latchup damages part of the chip. The results are, Device Manager shows the USB ports, all in order and correct, but each USB port is "deaf". And the reason for it, is the power source feeding the I/O driver, burns out, leaving the physical layer of the USB port non-functional. +5V -----/ /--+ <--- broken power path | v +5V Physical Logic Block ------------ I/O driver --------- D+ Layer Works OK --------- D- Of GND Port When the lightning strikes, it can induce a transient on the physical layer, and damage it. So it is possible the port may have failed, because of damage to the +5V,D+,D-,GND spot. It is even possible the +5V path to the port is what failed, and you might want to check that a mouse lights up when plugged into the port. The port won't function, if the +5V on the connector is no longer working. Some of those are fuse protected (but the fuse is a Polyfuse type, which normally never needs replacement, and the fuse recovers after it cools off). If you purchased the exact same motherboard, you should be able to drop it into place and continue using it. Depending on what other devices are damaged in your computer. Anything with wires connected to it, is an antenna for induced energy. So it could also be that the Ethernet port is blown, a dialup modem is blown, cable or ADSL modem is damaged and so on. If the lightning strike is very close, the effect can be powerful enough to leave physical effects, like burn marks, charring, chips with lids blown off. But even a weaker strike, can still leave invisible effects. I don't know enough about Vista, to know whether there is a "Repair Install" option. I see mention of a "Repair Your Computer" option mentioned here, and maybe that is the equivalent of a WinXP Repair Install. I don't know if that Vista option is smart enough to handle drivers for a completely different motherboard installation or not. http://support.microsoft.com/kb/951495/en-us Another thought that occurs to me, is you could purchase a USB2 PCI card, and use that to get some USB ports. That won't necessarily help with editing the contents of the BIOS using a USB keyboard, but for other USB purposes, it would give you some working ports, without replacing the motherboard. I also have a USB based floppy here, that I use occasionally. Whether that would be good enough for F6 driver installation would be another unanswered question. It is funny that the floppy would burn out, because the computer metal case should have provided a small amount of protection for it. It isn't really an "exposed antenna", like the external USB cabling would be. And if the lightning coupled into the floppy cable, you'd think it would also have blown IDE hard drives or IDE CDROM drives. Paul | |||||||||||||
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Posted by Joel on July 28, 2008, 8:52 am
Please log in for more thread options
> Hello,
> > I have a Gigabyte GA-K8nsc-939 board with a AMD 3200+ 64 bit chip. > My computer was off but still connected to an outlet backed up with a > surge protector when certain electronic equipment was hit with a power > spike during a lightning storm. My computer works fine. Except for the > USB ports and floppy drive. The on-board NIC, hard drives, operating > system (Vista Business), and memory, all operate normally. So far, I > cleared the BIOS, re-installed the chipset drivers, deleted the USB > drivers and let them reload. It seems the USB drivers re-install even > though the ports don't work. I also have a 64 in 1 memory card reader, > connected via a IDE onboard controller that is not detected any more > also. I tried to do a repair of Vista Business, but the reinstall > option is not available in this version of Vista. My thinking is to > order a new board and rebuild the system. Also, I have a HP printer > that got ruined. Any help would be appreciated. The only thing I have > not tried is to re-install Vista Business again but that would wipe out > all my programs. I don't know which way to go with my thinking here? Is > it the motherboard or Vista? I am pulling towards the motherboard. Any > advice would be appreciated. The only question I don't understand, is > why would the USB drivers re-load and be seen in the device manager as > normal if the ports don't work? > > Thanks, > > Comstat I have never been stiked by lighting, but what you describe above doesn't sound like the job of lighting or the lighting didn't do its job right. Or I have never heard of lightiong attacking software (the driver). Me? I would forget about the lighting but try to find the real reason behind the whole issue. | |||||||||||||
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Posted by Big_Al on July 28, 2008, 9:33 am
Please log in for more thread options Viper wrote:
> Hello,
> > I have a Gigabyte GA-K8nsc-939 board with a AMD 3200+ 64 bit chip. > My computer was off but still connected to an outlet backed up with a > surge protector when certain electronic equipment was hit with a power > spike during a lightning storm. My computer works fine. Except for the > USB ports and floppy drive. The on-board NIC, hard drives, operating > system (Vista Business), and memory, all operate normally. So far, I > cleared the BIOS, re-installed the chipset drivers, deleted the USB > drivers and let them reload. It seems the USB drivers re-install even > though the ports don't work. I also have a 64 in 1 memory card reader, > connected via a IDE onboard controller that is not detected any more > also. I tried to do a repair of Vista Business, but the reinstall > option is not available in this version of Vista. My thinking is to > order a new board and rebuild the system. Also, I have a HP printer > that got ruined. Any help would be appreciated. The only thing I have > not tried is to re-install Vista Business again but that would wipe out > all my programs. I don't know which way to go with my thinking here? Is > it the motherboard or Vista? I am pulling towards the motherboard. Any > advice would be appreciated. The only question I don't understand, is > why would the USB drivers re-load and be seen in the device manager as > normal if the ports don't work? > > Thanks, > > Comstat > A cheap USB card would give you ports without reloading. Its not a fix for the card reader or motherboard, just a simple work around. But then again, those too might not work either if its software/driver issues and that would be a good test, and if you had a good return policy on the card........ Hmmmmm. | |||||||||||||
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Posted by kony on July 28, 2008, 5:03 pm
Please log in for more thread options On Mon, 28 Jul 2008 09:58:12 GMT, "Viper"
>Hello,
> > I have a Gigabyte GA-K8nsc-939 board with a AMD 3200+ 64 bit chip. >My computer was off but still connected to an outlet backed up with a >surge protector when certain electronic equipment was hit with a power >spike during a lightning storm. My computer works fine. Except for the >USB ports and floppy drive. The on-board NIC, hard drives, operating >system (Vista Business), and memory, all operate normally. So far, I >cleared the BIOS, re-installed the chipset drivers, deleted the USB >drivers and let them reload. It seems the USB drivers re-install even >though the ports don't work. With surge damage, it's possible for some parts to be more subtly damaged and appear to work still but fail later. For reliable operation you must now consider every part in the system to be possibly damaged, including replacement of the motherboard and copying any important data off the hard drive as a backup. > I also have a 64 in 1 memory card reader,
>connected via a IDE onboard controller that is not detected any more >also. I tried to do a repair of Vista Business, but the reinstall >option is not available in this version of Vista. My thinking is to >order a new board and rebuild the system. Agreed, I'd get the same board again if you can find it at a reasonable price. You don't mention how much work it'd be to do a clean install instead, but I suspect the cost difference won't be as much as the value of your time saved by reusing the same model of replacement board. >Also, I have a HP printer
>that got ruined. Any help would be appreciated. The only thing I have >not tried is to re-install Vista Business again but that would wipe out >all my programs. It's not likely that only these specific functionalities in vista were somehow corrupted instead of the hardware itself being damaged. Wait on the Vista reinstall or repair until you have replaced the motherboard... then see if it's necessary to restore any functionality. >I don't know which way to go with my thinking here? Is
>it the motherboard or Vista? I am pulling towards the motherboard. Any >advice would be appreciated. The only question I don't understand, is >why would the USB drivers re-load and be seen in the device manager as >normal if the ports don't work? Drivers are only indicated as needed based on what windows detects, but windows detects a device, a thing, not whether that thing works properly. That's a bit different than if there were nothing to detect. There is a possiblity the hard drive was damaged and you have some file corruption, but not necessarily and to figure this out you need the motherboard replaced with one known working correctly. You could also toss the hard drive into another system temporarily and scan it for errors if you like, run the HDD manufacturer's diagnostics on it too. | |||||||||||||
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Motherboard Question After Lightning Strike
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>
> I have a Gigabyte GA-K8nsc-939 board with a AMD 3200+ 64 bit chip.
> My computer was off but still connected to an outlet backed up with a
> surge protector when certain electronic equipment was hit with a power
> spike during a lightning storm. My computer works fine. Except for the
> USB ports and floppy drive. The on-board NIC, hard drives, operating
> system (Vista Business), and memory, all operate normally. So far, I
> cleared the BIOS, re-installed the chipset drivers, deleted the USB
> drivers and let them reload. It seems the USB drivers re-install even
> though the ports don't work. I also have a 64 in 1 memory card reader,
> connected via a IDE onboard controller that is not detected any more
> also. I tried to do a repair of Vista Business, but the reinstall
> option is not available in this version of Vista. My thinking is to
> order a new board and rebuild the system. Also, I have a HP printer
> that got ruined. Any help would be appreciated. The only thing I have
> not tried is to re-install Vista Business again but that would wipe out
> all my programs. I don't know which way to go with my thinking here? Is
> it the motherboard or Vista? I am pulling towards the motherboard. Any
> advice would be appreciated. The only question I don't understand, is
> why would the USB drivers re-load and be seen in the device manager as
> normal if the ports don't work?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Comstat
>