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Installing Your Motherboard

Price Ram, Chips, Motherboards

Brand New: PC Help Blog

  1. Look on the paperwork that came for your motherboard for any instructions and review them carefully before starting.

  2. Arrange all of your computer components on a suitable work surface such as a workbench or table.

  3. If updating your old motherboard be sure the power is off and the computer is unplugged.

  4. Reach over and touch a shinny part of the metal case of the computer with your hand to discharge any static in your body. Avoid wearing socks on carpets as this builds static in your body. Static can and will damage chips.

  5. If  upgrading an older computer  remove all the cards from the old motherboard.

  6. Verify and change jumper settings as required by the manual.

  7. Inspect the new motherboard for physical damage.

  8. Check that the factory installed chips are fully seated.

  9. Examine the old and new motherboards to be sure the new one will fit in the case.

  10. Disconnect any necessary wires and remove the old motherboard from the case.

  11. Look at the new motherboard to be certain that any metal standoffs in the case line up with grounding holes in the motherboard.

  12. There must be at least one metal standoff to ground the motherboard to the case.

  13. Metal standoffs that do not line up with a grounding hole will cause a short circuit and damage the new motherboard voiding your warranty.

  14. Install one or metal standoffs into the case that line up with grounding holes in the motherboard and as many plastic standoffs as will line up with the remaining holes.

  15. Examine the area of the motherboard near metal parts of the case. If you think any part of the motherboard could accidentally touch the case, then add plastic spacers.

  16. Mount the motherboard into the case and put screws with colored cardboard or plastic insulating washers through the motherboard into the metal standoffs.

  17. Attach the connectors from the power supply to the motherboard with the black wires together in the middle.

  18. The five-pin connector on the motherboard is for the power LED and the keylock.

  19. Pin #1 and #3 are for the power LED. Usually the green wire goes on pin #1.

  20. Pins #4 & #5 are for the keylock and it doesn't matter which way its plugged in.

  21. Be sure the front panel key isn't locked or the computer can't communicate with the keyboard.

  22. The four-pin connector is for the case speaker. Mount the connector on pins #1 and #4. The red wire usually goes on pin #1, but it'll work either way.

  23. Most Pentium computers do not support the turbo switch and do not have the pins on the motherboard. If yours is one of these, go to the next step. A few older mb's do support the turbo and  the turbo LED connector is usually two pins and one is marked as positive. The colored wire (usually yellow or orange) goes on the positive pin.  If you connect the turbo switch you should be aware that there are usually two pins on the motherboard and three wires from the switch. Use two of the wires being certain you use the same two at each end

  24. The hard drive LED indicator will usually have two pins with one of them marked positive. Of the two wires from the HDD Led, one is usually red and goes on the positive pin.

  25. The reset switch has two pins and you can mount the two wires from the case either way.

  26. Be sure there is a cooling fan on your pentium or higher.

  27. Most of the sensor wires toward the front of the case are keyed and plug in only one way.

  28. All ribbon cables in your computer have a colored stripe on one side. Be sure the colored stripe lines up with pin #1 on both ends of the cable.

  29. Check that the input power switch on the back of the case is set to 115 and not to 230.

  30. Carefully plug in your RAM, Video and other cards using care to be sure they are properly seated in their slots.

  31. Connect your monitor and keyboard and mouse.

  32. Turn on the computer power switch.

Beeps when computer starts are error status codes.

1 short beep = everything OK.

2-beeps = CMOS settings need set.

8-beeps = video card not found.

1-long beep = RAM not found.

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U.S. Computer Corporation sold its first computer in 1972, its first personal computer in 1980 and its first IBM compatible in 1986?

 

 

 

 

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