D
David Farber
Guest
This Sony Vaio PCG-K23 over the last year would have good days and bad days.
Sometimes it would boot up on the first or second start. Other days, it
would take 20-30 starts to get it to boot. Other days it won't boot at all.
When I say boot, I mean the monitor powers on and the logo appears. If it
makes it that far, it's usually good to go. The XP operating system never
crashes and in that respect, it's very reliable. Getting back to the boot
problem, on several occasions it will hang at the logo and you will not be
able to enter the bios. When this happens, I remove the cmos battery, wait a
while, and reboot. Whether or not that has any direct effect other than
clearing out the bios settings is difficult to figure out because this isn't
an instant fix. Sometimes it takes another 20 times or an hour warm up
period before it will start normally again. Another clue is that if you're
shutting down Windows with a "restart," 99.9% of the time it will restart
perfectly. There has only been two occasions over the past year where the
monitor would not power up after a restart.
What happens presently when the power button is pressed is the power led
comes on and the three green led's blink on and off (for caps lock, num
lock, and scroll lock) the yellow power light comes on, and that's about it.
If left on for a while, the internal fans will crank up to a normal
operating speed. I am wondering if the startup circuit in the monitor is
flaky. Or more importantly, if the monitor doesn't come on, would that
prevent it from booting up? Of course the only way I would know if it were
booting up without being able to see a display would be to see the hard
drive activity light blinking and that doesn't happen when it doesn't boot.
I've had the mother board out of the case more times than I can remember
looking for cold solder joints, loose sockets, or anything that would point
to this kind of trouble. No luck. I also removed the dvd drive and modem
board to try and limit some of the hardware affecting the start. That
doesn't seem to matter either.
I've tried different ram sticks but that doesn't make any difference. This
last time it came on, the bios was reading only one stick of ram and despite
this, XP still ran smoothly. I have two 512mb sticks installed. This problem
is more seldom but it has mysteriously cleared itself up over time.
I've seen motherboards for sale on ebay but I hesitate to replace it if I
really can't pinpoint the trouble. I'd really like to replace the bios chip
but it's not a plug-in type and who knows if it's even available or if it
would even correct the problem.
And finally, it doesn't matter whether you use the AC power supply (which is
the original) or run it from the battery.
Thanks for any input you might have about this.
--
David Farber
David Farber's Service Center
L.A., CA
Sometimes it would boot up on the first or second start. Other days, it
would take 20-30 starts to get it to boot. Other days it won't boot at all.
When I say boot, I mean the monitor powers on and the logo appears. If it
makes it that far, it's usually good to go. The XP operating system never
crashes and in that respect, it's very reliable. Getting back to the boot
problem, on several occasions it will hang at the logo and you will not be
able to enter the bios. When this happens, I remove the cmos battery, wait a
while, and reboot. Whether or not that has any direct effect other than
clearing out the bios settings is difficult to figure out because this isn't
an instant fix. Sometimes it takes another 20 times or an hour warm up
period before it will start normally again. Another clue is that if you're
shutting down Windows with a "restart," 99.9% of the time it will restart
perfectly. There has only been two occasions over the past year where the
monitor would not power up after a restart.
What happens presently when the power button is pressed is the power led
comes on and the three green led's blink on and off (for caps lock, num
lock, and scroll lock) the yellow power light comes on, and that's about it.
If left on for a while, the internal fans will crank up to a normal
operating speed. I am wondering if the startup circuit in the monitor is
flaky. Or more importantly, if the monitor doesn't come on, would that
prevent it from booting up? Of course the only way I would know if it were
booting up without being able to see a display would be to see the hard
drive activity light blinking and that doesn't happen when it doesn't boot.
I've had the mother board out of the case more times than I can remember
looking for cold solder joints, loose sockets, or anything that would point
to this kind of trouble. No luck. I also removed the dvd drive and modem
board to try and limit some of the hardware affecting the start. That
doesn't seem to matter either.
I've tried different ram sticks but that doesn't make any difference. This
last time it came on, the bios was reading only one stick of ram and despite
this, XP still ran smoothly. I have two 512mb sticks installed. This problem
is more seldom but it has mysteriously cleared itself up over time.
I've seen motherboards for sale on ebay but I hesitate to replace it if I
really can't pinpoint the trouble. I'd really like to replace the bios chip
but it's not a plug-in type and who knows if it's even available or if it
would even correct the problem.
And finally, it doesn't matter whether you use the AC power supply (which is
the original) or run it from the battery.
Thanks for any input you might have about this.
--
David Farber
David Farber's Service Center
L.A., CA