Question Old ASRock board throwing errors with original hardware

Dec 23, 2024
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Hey!

I have an old set of hardware that was just laying around for a few years, but recently I decided I wanted to turn it into a MC server box.
The hardware is a i7-7700k and ASRock Z270 Taichi with 32GB ram. It was missing a CPU cooler and power supply, so I just bought those.
But when trying to boot it, the motherboard shows codes 00->15->30->00->4C (all shown in around a second), then for a brief part of a second shuts off (or so I think, since the fans slow down briefly before picking up speed again), and then repeat until I unplug the system.

I don't see any bent pins on the motherboard socket, so I was hoping to flash the bios, but it seems that requires to reach the bios first...
This is the original hardware- the cpu and ram haven't been removed from the board since it was last used.

Any ideas? Please let me know if there's anything I forgot to mention.
Thank you!
 
Solution
4C is a RAM fault code. The ones before are probably the normal POST cycle as it checks things.

You could try to short the CMOS pins (might even be a reset button on that Taichi) and see if it will boot. Got any other RAM sticks available, at least one working other stick?
4C is a RAM fault code. The ones before are probably the normal POST cycle as it checks things.

You could try to short the CMOS pins (might even be a reset button on that Taichi) and see if it will boot. Got any other RAM sticks available, at least one working other stick?
 
Solution
4C is a RAM fault code. The ones before are probably the normal POST cycle as it checks things.

You could try to short the CMOS pins (might even be a reset button on that Taichi) and see if it will boot. Got any other RAM sticks available, at least one working other stick?
So I started testing the ram, stick by stick, in the first slot. Every single stick worked. It would still show 4C for a brief second, but then would go on to count up and get me to the bios. So I started testing the second slot, still with a stick in the first- every stick worked.
Then I started testing a stick in first and a stick in third, and it started giving me the error and loop, no matter the stick. Trying to boot after that failed, even if I just had a stick in slot one. Eventually, after enough reboots and clearing cmos, it let me boot. Same happens with slot 4.

I'm currently letting it just infinitely try to boot with 4 sticks.
I love ram, but ram consistently hates me between all my builds.
 
I have an asrock z390 Taichi and it is also very finicky about RAM settings. I wouldn't be surprised if at some point after a power down your system RAM gremlin will show up again.
I'm glad you wouldn't be surprised, because it just happened again. I found that removing the third ram stick, resetting the cmos battery, letting it boot, and then adding back in the other stick without resetting the cmos battery works.
This does worry me about this thing's "remote-accessed server" viability though, so I hope the gremlin has decided to move out.