A Customer Brought Us A Silver Strike Bowling Arcade Game Computer To Repair, Can We Fix It????
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- Опубліковано 14 жов 2021
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That was a good clone PC build for that game. Losing the CMOS battery does weird stuff to the BIOS. And it does help to have the hard drive selected as the boot device ;)
Professional computer guy for 24 years
Thank you Tony, we appreciate it man!!!
A nice solid system, agreed. IMHO, I'd probably would want to replace or rebuild the cooling fans so no further issues would force a callback on it.
Agreed on that, cooling is a cheap and inexpensive long term preventative measure.
Ron, I think in this case, you showed just enough to help someone who is trying to fix their own machine with the same issue. I don't think showing trial-and-error during the video is a bad thing.
Thank you Robert, i'm glad you appreciated it, we appreciate you watching!
Nice fix - you did fine :)
To echo some others - I'd definitely make an image of that hard drive for them because that drive will probably fail at some point; before the rest of the components. Ultimate Boot CD (which you can burn to a flash drive) would be a pretty easy way to clone it.
BTW - great explanation of why the curve makes the difference: ua-cam.com/video/aFPJf-wKTd0/v-deo.html
And also why the whole curve thing is a recent bowling innovation!
@@DocNo27 He stated in another post that he already had a ghost image of the hard drive.
I have always enjoyed your videos. Especially the in-depth vintage pinball repairs. To me, those have always been fascinating. You mentioned in a previous video that someone bookmarked your Amazon link. Since I do a lot of shopping on Amazon, I have done the same thing. It is my way of saying thanks for the entertaining and informative videos.
You always have excellent manners. Good on you. Keep it up, ... it’s not 19th century, ... it’s timeless!
Thank you Mark we appreciate you watching!
nice to see you got it goin. has anyone else mentioned to watch out for bad capacitors, that system is from the prime time of the cap plague.
Doing the Lord's work right here
Thank you Seth that's very nice of you to say, we appreciate you watching man!
Some motherboards have a jumper to clear the CMOS, likely for the case where the battery powered it up with impossible settings. Of course if you're adventurous, put the battery in while in the CMOS settings :)
I'd agree that this was Ron's problem with the PC not booting (POSTing) after replacing the battery. I've had it happen to my systems before, and have been forced to short the "clear CMOS" jumper for 10 seconds or so to get a clean set of defaults.
Sorry about the double post but I must say you did a excellent job my man
Thank you Famic0m the Vulpix we appreciate that
"We had a gentleman caller..." How 19th century of you. LOL...Thanks for all the great content.
Hahaha I just like talking like that, I don't give a shit if people think it's weird, I think it's how we oughta act :)
@@LyonsArcade That's a smooth delivery.
Ron, just so you know (and this isn't a criticism)... _technically speaking,_ it is still an IDE drive. IDE just stands for "Integrated Drive Electronics", meaning it doesn't require a separate drive controller card the way hard drives did back in the 1980s. SATA is a reference to the I/O method (Serial Advanced Technology Attachment, aka Serial ATA or SATA), not the drive. The old ribbon cables were PATA (Parallel ATA).
Don't worry about it. Even techs like me refer to them as "SATA drives", and older drives as "EIDE drives" (or if they're really ancient, maybe SCSI or MFM drives), for clarity's sake. Nice job... you're definitely smart enough to work on a computer. Although I will admit that it's probably helpful that these days, everything is color coded and/or designed to only go in one way. It's a lot harder to get things wrong than it used to be. I started building my own computers almost 30 years ago. Things were very different then.
Thank you SpearM75503 I didn't realize that about IDE... I have an issue where I forget things, it's one of the reasons I work on stuff the way I do. I can remember ideas and concepts pretty well but I'm horrible at remembering specifics. one of the reasons I film the pinball repairs is so I can go back and watch them if i'm trying to remember how I fixed something before.. and it's why I do the same things over and over in the videos i'm basically talking through "O.K., I don't remember how I fixed this last time, but I remember it had something to do with the ball count unit" etc.
So IDE EIDE SCSI SATA ATA PATA is like a nightmare to me, haha. I remember it more as "These were the ones that took the fat ribbon cable, I think the laptop ones used a smaller cable... and then they had the ones that only needed 1 cord.... and I think there's something newer now... and eventually they don't spin anymore...." I can always remember the basic concepts of it but something that requires specific nomenclature I'm not that good at (or really all that interested in to be honest!)... I'll remember however now that you mentioned it that technically they're all IDE but I probably won't remember the specifics of PATA vs SATA....
Thanks as always man we appreciate you hanging out with us tonight!
@@LyonsArcade It's okay, Ron. Even I tend to think of it as "SATA is the thin one (usually red or blue), PATA is the big gray ribbon cable (with the red stripe to mark pin 1)." LOL! And yeah, I take photos of every computer I work on, especially if it's a make or model I've never worked on before. In the short term, it helps me keep track of what goes where; and in the long term, if I ever work on that particular model again, I can refer back to the photos I took. "Oh yeah, _that's_ how I fixed that last time!" 😉
Good video. I just repaired one today that had a dead CMOS battery but it was the original board/system. Still booted properly with a dead battery. Turned out it was overheating. I cleaned all fans, CPU cooler and but new thermal paste on CPU and heatsink. Good as new !
Also, there is proprietary boards that the software looks for during boot time. If it's not detected, it will throw that error. Just need to plug in the board via USB.
Looks like a pretty cool arcade game a bit of a pain look after but will worth it I've never had the opportunity to see one in real life so this was kinda nice
Thank you for watching Jason we appreciate it!!
Nice job getting it working, I think a few other people have pointed out you just need to reset the BIOS once you replace the battery because sometimes the settings get corrupted. I've seen this game in a few places but never heard of the Vegas mode.
They got rid of the Vegas mode in the later editions because it's illegal in some places (whoops) Thanks for watching Chris!
@@LyonsArcade That's crazy. You're not actually getting anything in exchange for cards.. it's just a different way to score the game. Definitely letter-of-the-law stuff right there.
Nice, easy fix. Thanks Ronnie!
Thank you for watching Miguel!
You are a real hacker man! Thanks for the video Ron. Awesome as always.
I'm a hack! Thanks for watching MrVectrex glad you enjoyed it....
Nice video that I love to watch. It's funny that such a game smoothly running under Pentium 4 with 512MB, but when it is Linux, it runs surprisingly well on weaker hardware.
Fun fact; that Hard Disk Drive was able to power up using either Molex or SATA power.
I forgot SATA power existed, lol Thanks for watching K.R & Arcade Of NorthCYP
"power up using either Molex or SATA power" but not both, that lets the magic blue smoke escape.
I was saying noooooo to the removing of the 1st boot device, and then your music starting playing right after it. It was hilarious.
19:25 Not a "Linux" thing. The 'puter is not, erm, "aware" of any OS beyond BIOS at that point.
And AvE would, like I pointed out sometime back, have been happy with the idea of "sanding the f*ck" out of the battery crust on the circuit board.
You might perhaps want to clone some of the old SATA HDD's to SSD disks. You could still get some smaller sizes like 60 GB that were common as mechanical drives in that era, they are fairly cheap for small disk sizes today, you avoid buying modern large drives that might not be supported by old systems, and as a bonus they improve access speed slightly even on an older SATA-I system.
You are correct here Joe, I would not just build a new computer for a video game cab without some experimentation first because there can be surprises. Video cards are particularly problematic.
Thank you Litchfield County Computer, we've ran into issues in the limited times we've worked on this kind of stuff...
Glad you got it working and it was a simple repair. Only the battery
Thank you for watching Tracy!!!
Us Aussies love your channel! (wasn't me that bought stuff though) :)
Most motherboards have a 2 way jumper to clear the CMOS should you get a freeze after installing a battery or other issue, Its usually 3 pin and labled CMOS on the motherboard. Move the jumper from the right and center pin to the left and center pin for 30 seconds to clear CMOS back to default. Great video as usual :)
Nicely done.have a nice weekend
Thank you demofilmpuntnl :)
@3:41 I'll help you out ;) the big one with the 4 plugs that only go 1 way because of it shape? Molex, usually used for powering HDD's (SATA and IDE in this case, i think there was a period where HDD's had both as they were transitioning to SATA). The other one usually a wide strip of small pins with sort of an L-shape if you look straight on the pins i think it's just called a sata connector
^ This. I've been a certified computer repairman for 2 decades. Jeroen is correct... that hard drive is from the transitional period, when some power supplies only had the molex type of connectors.
Also those 4 pin molex connectors can go both ways. Don't ask me why I know. RIP hard drive.
I'd never seen one with both types of power, I guess that really helps depending on how your power supply is wired...
I was gonna chime in on enabling the 'Silent Boot' CMOS option, though it seems the original mobo had a custom flash bios logo to show in silent, now it'd probably just show a big obnoxious INTEL splash screen instead (bletch!).
On a different subject; Ever worked with the Gonbes GBS-8200/8220 video adapter boards? Seems they need a few parts tweaks to clean up their video output... but at $30, worth some soldering imo.
At 13:29 I was yelling, you are right! Set the boot device order.
I could hear something way off, it wasn't coming through the camera, it was like it was outside :) Thanks for watching Chad!
As an IT guy, I'm proud of you.
It is a SATA drive. That is a serial version of ATA/IDE. Some had 2 power sockets, but you use only one. While adding both might work, really, you should use only 1 to avoid possible trouble. Like if you use cables off of independent power rails that aren't adjusted exactly internally, that could wear the power supply. Most PSUs are single-rail. But some are multi-rail, and a split rail is a compromise where that is a single-rail, but with independent current limiters.
And with changing the battery, you might need to (turned off and unplugged) momentarily change a CMOS erase jumper or push a button in that area.
Haven't watched yet but interested to see how this goes. I've got SSB that keeps rebooting after 4-5 mins but the pc looks different to this one. Mine is the Nighthawk system and doesn't have the CD drive like this one.
This one is a replacement of some type I don’t think it’s official….
@@LyonsArcade be interested to see what is used in this setup as I know it's notorious for not liking replacement parts in the Nighthawk system. Think my issue is graphics card related.
@Intellivis jon I’m not an absolute computer professional but it almost sounds like an issue with the motherboard. I’ve learned quite a bit from an IT technician I know quite well and computers resetting typically was an issue with the motherboard.
Reboots like that are usually because of unstable power. A bad power supply can cause issues like the one you describe and is the culprit most of the time, unfortunately you can't always use a multimeter to test them. Your meter might show the right voltage but will not show how much ripple the voltage rail has (you pretty much need a scope to see the ripple). If that has been replaced it could be bad capacitors on the motherboard, the capacitors can be replaced but its almost impossible with out the proper equipment.
It could also be an overhearing CPU from a dead CPU fan or a heat sink that is not seated properly but that is not terribly common. Most modern CPUs (from at least 2000 and up) will slow down to a crawl if they over heat.
If you ever have a hard drive that has been corrupted and won't boot there is a computer program known as spinrite. it is self booting and has its own operating system. it will low level read a hard drive many multiple times on corrupted tracks in different ways until it can get a confirm able read and then rewrite the data back to the drive. it will also test the drive and label bad sectors as bad and lock them out and refresh the data already on the disk so its signal strength of the recording stays good. if the drive is starting to die this program might revive it long enough for you to make a functional copy to replace the failing hardware. great for arcades and home computers. I have had it work for an hour and make a disk bootable or sometimes it ran for 4 days to get things going again
Great vid, Ron.
AvE is Arduino vs Evil. Another UA-cam legend.
i laughed my ass off at that freakout fade edit 13:28
Thanks Rat Lord FX we're trying to be entertaining :) See you on the next video!
I've seen big name games powered by Dells, and those sometimes gets a bit messy, especially if they got the capacitor plague.
I wonder how the system would handle a higher end 3D card....
In Vegas mode with getting the cards.
Is it playing like poker or black jack?
It's kind of like Poker, I can't remember since I haven't played it in awhile but you get a card for each strike or spare I think and then at the end you compare hands (or something like that)...
Great job as always. You're a pro. Have you heard about the MiSTer fpga arcade emulator? What do you think about it?
I haven't heart of it yet... I don't do emulators much, if it's FPGA should be interesting though...
@@LyonsArcade check it out. It's open source. I just built one. It has 15khz analog out too. Very cool to have neogeo, CPS1 and CPS2 working.
You are totally smart enough to work on a PC...
Thanks for watching Theodore!!!
What degree angle do u set EM pinball machines
Focus tip: Zoom out to maximum wide angle (gives you infinity focus) and stay there. Drawback: you need to move your camera in order to get a close-up.
That's how I usually keep it but it trips, it starts drifting when it warms up, if I do shorter edits it doesn't act up as bad....
@@LyonsArcade DSLR's tend to get funky after a half hours of continuous filming. The CCD's heat up. Most are capped to 29 minutes or so.
Heh as a computer repairman it was funny watching you stumble through the cmos settings. 😂 as for the boot order, the drive with the software on it should be the only boot device selected, as it is a video game.
Any time you can get away with just swapping the cmos battery and setting it up again is a good repair.
Also, AvE just says "focus you****"
Thank you Lt Siver, I thought that setting looked a little off... you'd think they wouldn't set it to by default have nothing selected but maybe they can't default something selected because they don't know what hard drive you'll have installed (if any).... we appreciate you watching, thanks!!!
@@LyonsArcade it depends on the tech at the time. The bios is both IDE and SATA compatible as that board was made when the transition from the former to the latter was happening. As such, the default is probably for the primary master IDE drive, instead of the sata drive in primary master IDE compatible mode. I think that's why it defaulted to disabled.
@@LyonsArcade In a more modern version of the same problem, I recently had to repair a customer's PC - it wouldn't boot due to the CMOS battery failed, and since the default on that board was for secure boot to be off, windows 10 wouldn't boot, since it had been set up for secure boot when Win10 was loaded. Once the battery was replaced and the settings updated, her machine came up normally.
Oh Ron, You're not using the right words, you're not doing it right and you're taking too long - I could've done it better...! 😂😂😂 As always a nicely informative video mate!
@11:15 GF Geforce? :) You can find the motherboard type/serial in the BIOS (I think it is the first screen). You can try and put silent mode on (it removes all the BIOS text off screen and will only show on error. It depends on what brand of motherboard it is on what you get. Some will show a logo of the board or something else.... or just plain black. So a nice and quiet boot :) USB boot disabled is fine. If it runs on windows enableing this will enable you to install Windows from a USB stick. @12:47 if the HD content is in tact you are golden :) The first boot device is whatever the first HD is installed. Oh no.. that's the CD-ROM no? you forgot to check what IDE/SATA drives were detected (you can see that in the boot screen before the F4 if you have 2 devices and only see one line one might be not connected or working) you can also see this in the BIOS setup @(9:17 -> drive configuration) also this is probably were you can enable the floppy disks A: and B: as we can see :)
You’ve got some computer guys in your viewers bub!
I got this arcade but i have a big problem.. now when i start my game nothing happen.. just red light on motherboard , nothing appear in my screen.. its possible to put Hard disk drive in another pc and run on it?
Common arcade CPU failures, in no specific order: CPU fan, Video card fan, Power supply, CMOS battery, Hard Drive, Poor contacts (re-seat RAM, Video card), corrosion (environmental and/or battery leakage). Best practices for resetting BIOS: Check online first, most settings for your game are posted somewhere - forums or manufacturer support website. 1. Reset BIOS to default settings, 2. set date/time, 3. Set drives - disable drives not physically present (CD/DVD ROM, floppy), 4. make sure Serial/COM and Parallel ports are enabled (usually used for security dongle and/or COM for input board), 5. set boot order (HDD first, then cd-rom - floppy if present. Also OK to disable, but using update disks later may not work without specific keystroke at boot) 6. SET AC POWER LOSS TO "ON" - idk how many times I've helped people with this. this needs to be on 99% of the time so that when the cabinet is powered on the computer self-powers on and boots. I own 8 arcades that are PC hardware, i've upgraded them all to solid state disks too.
@21:55 Don't tell us what is boring.... remember we have nothing better to do.
Ain't that the truth! Thank you for watching NivagSwerdna we appreciate it as always
Ha, after last time I found ur video on the Nighthawk rebuild useful and this time ur claiming ur a computer n00b (i even emailed y'all), I got ours sorted.. I was screaming at your BIOS stuff, you done that enough times dude. Intel boards although 'complex' then can be annoying as you would think One Drive, One order for boot pri. Never mind, GG
Thank you Dave, we got it up and running again, the guy called and said it was good to go.... we appreciate you watching man!!!
The 4-10 and 6-7 splits can be picked up by using "English" on the front pin to slide it sideways into the rear one. That's what the pros typically attempt, but even then I've heard a statistic that they only succeed maybe 10% of the time. The 7-10 split is the monster that requires bouncing one pin off the back and into the other.
While the PC side didn't end up being all that interesting or unusual, I am rather curious what that USB I/O board was doing. Don't get to see the modern side of arcade hardware much at all.
I don't know much about the specific technical stuff on it, but there is a USB cable going up to the I/O board... there is a security chip on the I/O board too, but it's more 'universal' in that the same little chip can work on several different games (for Incredible Technologies).... The board itself has a Jamma connection so you can easily install it in a Jamma wired cabinet (to connect to the coin door, the monitor, the speakers, and the buttons)... the board has a trackball input as well as those Jamma edge connections.... there are also three sets of dipswitches to set resolution (and a bunch of the switches are unused)... The audio comes from the CPU sound card (the onboard one, nothing special) and plugs into the I/O board with some stereo RCA plugs... It's kind of like they took the part of a traditional arcade PCB that handles the I/O and sound amplification and final video processing and put it on a separate board...
Thanks for watching David!!!
There are a lot of people on AvE channel that would love this channel
You need to get a ghost image of that hard drive because that's the only component that can't be replaced or repaired dude. X
He stated in another post that he already had a ghost image of the hard drive.
@@SpearM3064 well he's not quite as green as he is cabbage looking as we say over here in the UK. I think Ron's a champion of the universe!
I did make a copy of the drive (and quite a few others) over the years so yes I have a copy, thank you for watching Robert!!! You're the man.
@0:48 Now that is my area of interest (i assure you i have not peeked and skipped ahead in the video).
The error message was something on the lines of: No bootable device, insert boot disk and press the (infamous) any key
That can be loads of things.
- Failed HD (just defective electronically or physically)
- Wrongly wired/jumpered (for IDE - first device from the mainboard MA - master, SL - second device slave. nevermind CS - Cable select)
- Something is wrong with the IDE/SATA bus on the mainboard. (you might want to switch the IDE/SATA cable to another connector on the mainboard and use the above trick to connect the 2 on 1 IDE cable. For SATA (Defaullt in red with black plugs) usually no jumper settings are needed or available)
- The bootcode/loader or boot sector has gone bad
-
- etc..
heck it's even different with diff operating systems :P
you forgot to set the bios to ignore no keyboard error so when its reinstalled in the game with no keyboard it does not stop on a keyboard error
[21:21] Haha, yeah, I agree you do sound like AvE. As always, thanks for the amazing content!
Edit: Ah yes looks like you do use manual mode! Sorry I missed that!
I usually do switch over to manual but I don't take many static shots! Thanks for watching Amrit!
Scuse my ignorance but who is Ave?
@@naytch2003 ua-cam.com/users/arduinoversusevil2025
He's a machinist, someone on par with ThisOldTony :)
@@LyonsArcade Focus you f***!
That’s AvE.
Like it .. . Always like it
Thank you Masato K you're the man :)
After 5 minutes watching (Therefore I don't yet know if you fixed it or not, or what the problem is other than "no disk" as you described.
BUT, as a computer guy, my guess is a dead hard drive, and being a SATA connector, you can swap that out for any modern HDD or SSD (SSD would even make the machine boot faster)
It's not a free fix, but for (probably, roughly) under or around $20 US bucks for a 128gb SSD at the moment, I'd go with that and find the software or try to salvage it in another computer if the drive will run at all and it's just the OS that's knackered.
That probably won't help, and the problem may be something else, still watching as I said, just my first thoughts if I was given this thing to fix at random.
Quick edit after 3 more minutes... Cmos battery will cause all sorts of issues. Hopefully replacing that worked!
The bios has been reset, you need to get back into the bios if you can to set up your parameters. Hard cold boots over time will mess up the indexes causing crashes. You have to acknowledge the boot device or the bios wont read the hard drive. Good job fixing the problem.
Was it connected to the Internet? If not, how would it check for update? (Updating would probably be a bad thing 😛)
It was connected to a modem that called in to IT's servers believe it or not. You would set it up to call in the morning or whenever and it'd call in each day. The reason this one was trying to call was because it hasn't called in, in like.... 10 years, lol so it's trying to do that morning call :) Thanks for watching Art!
fans are spinnin, lights are blinkin, cops are after my hot rod lincoln
I used league bowl and hit straight on but when I throw the ball at 26mph the pins explode lol and sometimes come out farther than the arm could reach to clear the pins lol.... Got hassled at first but that's life lol
The HDD that is in there is a Serial ATA or SATA for short
Thank you FamicOm the Vulpix!
how did the boot device get set to disabled? did somebody intentionally do that?
Silver strike bowling does it come from the same company that does Golden tea golf?
Yes it does, Incredible Technologies!
battery failed, and just needed to be reconfigged after. given the age, (which its apparent with it rocking an xfx geforece 6600), well.. i'm surprised it lasted this long.
that's a SATA drive. You can use either power connector but NOT both. The SATA power connector is on the other side in the dark....and yes you need a new 2032 battery
Thank you I finally found it over there!
thats not a silver strike computer. That isn’t the security dongle for that machine.
You are correct though. The security dongle and i/o board. It will boot to linux then stop at the check.
The computer that is supposed to be a intel oem pentium4 motherboard with a celeron cpu installed. A GeForce 5500 agp video card. Think a 80g hdd.
Your hard disk drive isn’t being detected. Thats your problem though.
If you find the image blast it to a new drive and see if it boots
I am what some call a “professional”. I’m IT.
Also fixed this machine before. The old intel boards were terrible. They would last about two years and get swapped. Dot-IT (not to be confused with actual IT) made a swap out program for the warranty period. Thats how bad it was. Good news is off the shelf works too.
There used to be a upgrade kit to ssb2. It came with the cdrom to install the new programming. It also came with the dongles. I bet someone you know has one laying around
Can also be turned into golden tee
Usually there is a BIOS setting to ignore a missing keyboard, could save 2 seconds every boot.
Joe, I have a SSB 2009, Would it be possible for me to upgrade to a LIVE or X?
You have to get a new security chip, a new in out board, and install the new program.
Any way you can point me in the right direction to find those?
The only upgrades would be to include a higher end AMD board and chip...whick would mean ANY AMD chip and board...
even a ryzen apu would be a yuge step up.
force it across the Brooklyn line into the 1/3 pocket for a strike
I have the exact same voltmeter‼️®™️ 👏👏👏
“I don’t know what I am doing most of time I just bumble around”
Don’t mind if we all call you uncle bumblefuck then! ~AvE
I'd recommend getting the drive cloned so you have a backup copy.
He already had a backup. He said so in another post.
@@SpearM3064 ah ok. I only saw this video
yes I was able to back one up a couple years ago, I've saved a few of them by burning new drives (and solid state drives, you can put like a 500gb solid state drive on it and it'll run just fine)
Do you ever make copies of the drives in these machines? If that drive ever fails, how hard is it to get copies of the right software for machines of this era?
I have a lil' collection of the images on the drives, most of them are in MAME as CHD's by the way. Thanks for watching Justin!
Having seen your video on CNC router. I feel you are not quite as green as you might claim. You do you
We played it every night at the bar in indy fun as hell even got my card to play moved to Georgia last year no machine to play close sucks
You'd think there'd be somebody around you that would know to put one in, people love this game and you can make money on it consistently... Thanks for watching Mike we appreciate it!!!
I may have to buy one im having withdrawls lol
Who cares if you don't say the right words or 'jargon'...end of the day who gives a shit..it's the results that count.. awesome video as always Ronnie..I'm still trying to get my head around schematics..but learning 😁
A lot of people care more about process than end results. These people are strange….
@@LyonsArcade OCD maybe?..for me personally I'm alot like My Mate Vince(a UA-camr) who tries to repair stuff with no electronic knowledge but he always gives a disclaimer at the start
Sounds like my kinda guy!
@@LyonsArcade Yeah it's a great channel..attempts to fix all sorts of stuff like rc cars, game consoles etc
@@LyonsArcade oh and what's the deal with Bianca Belair's ponytail? And Becky lynch..the man??..what the hell
I agree I think you are right now it needs to be in the Machine with the dango device
You need power to the hard drive. The 4 prong power is empty. Only has the red SATA connected no power.
I thought that too but there was another power connector, weird setup...
The system wasn't detecting the CD ROM Drive, does it not use it?
Only for game software updates, which is a super rare thing.
It does that on all PCs
I was friends with a guy who had a strap called The Automatic that was available at AMF Bowling, There is a UA-camr called TheGebs24 who was a Kagler.
The lifetime money total is for the HARD DRIVE.
Ah, that makes sense, thank you!
Right at the outset...if it's bringing up a text error message, I'd say the CPU is just fine...the rest of the PC, though...
If you have trouble with auto focus, turn off auto focus and do it manually.
That's how i've been working around it on some videos but on videos like this where i'm moving the camera it's harder to get right.... thanks for watching Randy!
My wife is not a gamer but she'll play (and enjoy) arcade1up Golden Tee but she says "I wish this had bowling on it, I'd like bowling better
Silver strike is very fun!
Knew you had it 😜
We usually get there one way or another (Blondie)
Run run as fast as you can get away from it
I'm not really a big fan of the obsolete computer based stuff from this time period but hey we work on what we see not what we want :) Thanks for watching Izzynutz!
Good Ole ave think aye+v in it to get ave. As he would say, focus to fuck. Lol
Enable that boot device to the Hitachi hard drive and it should boot up
you didn't watch the whole video.
@@RWL2012 I did watch the hole video but I was commenting before I finished watching the hole video yes
Any other pc nerds yelling no on boot sequence lol I know I was ( side note cpu temp Is a little high in bios even with Intel cheap cooler)
Replace the CMOS battery.
... right words yada yada
@8:28 You do not need the battery for it to start. It just remembers the date and certain options of the system. Just press F4 exit without rebooting/saving and the OS will start (if it was capable of booting in the first place). Or do not set the correct date and save, you can always return to that screen during boot up (enter setup). The saving probably makes it boot faster in the future. You will at least know if it will try and boot. ( saw that it found the HDD with autodetect ) as long as the PC stays powered it will remember the settings. You can turn the computer off with the power button (in some cases keep it pressed for 6 seconds and it will cut the power. Usually it will also save the CMOS settings as these things always have a small 3/5v line running (for the power button). Unless.... you use the power switch on the back :P
You broke your own rule and didn't start from the wall. The slow/hung boot makes me suspect the power supply is on its way out or undersized for the video card.
When the BIOS is cleared they do take a while to display I build them and 10-20 seconds after clearing is common
you sound like renebean to me
He does sound like me a little bit!
Ron, I'd consider you troubleshooting skills to be sufficient enough to fix a computer issue without being a "computer guy". Your camera skills however, I do question.
Ok
He pronounces his name Ah-vee (AVE). And he tells his camera to focus you "bad F word"!
AvE uses more colourful language! Pixies falling out and all sorts.
0:00 imma guess the battery is dead lol because thumbnail
okay, if the battery was dead that's the same thing you would get each time you booted, so there must have been a glitch or surge that caused the BIOS/CMOS to reset or get a little bitrot where setting it and resaving let it write the bits fresh and move on.
good job with the simple repair where a lot of people would have dorked around and probably broke extra stuff.