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I screwed up my 770 - Please help if you can
Posted: Wed Jan 04, 2006 9:11 pm
by jsantang
OK people,
I have a TP770 in which i swapped out the P200MMX and put iin a PII 266. I got tired of the error code 192 and needing to hit esc and F1 to get past it. I went into the config bios and did a Ctrl-D and possibly messed up a value on the first page. Now when i turn it on and get error 192, i can't get past it with an esc and F1 trick anymore. it just keeps coming up with the two error screens. Can anyone advise me a solution to get the BIOS back to a good state? maybe a jpg photo of the ctrl-D screen showing the correct values, or some reset proceedure. I really screwed it up now...
Thanks for your help,
Joe
p.s. - it is a 9548-40U
Posted: Wed Jan 04, 2006 9:16 pm
by pkiff
If you can still get into your BIOS/EZ-Config by pressing and holding F1 on bootup, then I think you can use the "Initialize" function and this will reset the BIOS to its default/factory settings (I think!).
Phil.
No good
Posted: Fri Jan 06, 2006 10:46 am
by jsantang
pkiff wrote:If you can still get into your BIOS/EZ-Config by pressing and holding F1 on bootup, then I think you can use the "Initialize" function and this will reset the BIOS to its default/factory settings (I think!).
Phil.
No, that doesn't help. Does anyone know a way to get the CMOS settings back to default? Would removing the battery do it? If so, which one, the watch style accessible under the bottom cover, or the yellow blister pack one with the connector that you have to remove the keyboard to get to?
Any advice would be really helpful...
Thanks
Posted: Fri Jan 06, 2006 7:04 pm
by 440roadrunner
I'm not familiar with your model (mine are 600, 600x) but most newere machines have a hidden reset switch
HAVE YOU DOWNLOADED THE hardware manual?
Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2006 12:13 am
by skygodtj
If you pull the CMOS battery(the yellow one under the memory cover), it will revert to the BIOS "Enter correct Date/Time" screen on startup, once you set the time/date, it will not give you an opportunity to do any other changes
However, once the CMOS battery has been pulled, -it may- clear the other settings and allow it to boot correctly.
TJ
Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2006 1:09 am
by LtTPfan
The yellow battery is the "standby battery" and requires removal of the keyboard. The "backup battery" is silver colored about the size of a quarter and is located under the DIMM cover. Removing it my clear what you've messed up but I doubt it as using the initialize feature should have restored things to stock. I'll see if I can get a decent pic of my CMOS dump tomorrow.
Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2006 1:15 pm
by jsantang
LtTPfan wrote:The yellow battery is the "standby battery" and requires removal of the keyboard. The "backup battery" is silver colored about the size of a quarter and is located under the DIMM cover. Removing it my clear what you've messed up but I doubt it as using the initialize feature should have restored things to stock. I'll see if I can get a decent pic of my CMOS dump tomorrow.
Thanks, that is probably the only thing that will help me. there are a few pages of CMOS , i dont know which i messed up.
joe
Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2006 8:15 pm
by LtTPfan
jsantang,
Send me your email addy in a PM and I'll send you the pic I got. It appears readable.