Hey guys,
So I've just swapped out my mobo from an Asus ROG Rampage IV Extreme to a new, bare-bones generic Intel X79 Motherboard LGA 2011. I can get the PC to boot to bios but it won't boot to my ssd, it displays the 'Reboot or Select Proper Boot Device' error and it's being very pedantic about little things like if I don't let the capacitors shut down completely then there's a chance it won't boot into bios/won't boot to a usb at all, sometimes the keyboard won't be connected (it's lights wont turn on) etc.
I took it to a repair shop a few weeks ago when I was diagnosing why the pc wouldn't boot at all and they told me all the parts were fine except for the cpu/mobo which they couldn't test because they didn't have any LGA2011 parts. I took it to a second place which did have a compatible cpu and they told me the board was busted which was good to know for certain. I bought a new, relatively bare-bones board (as a placeholder until I get new parts [gpu, mobo, cpu]) to get the system up and running again and now I'm having the issues as above.
I think it's possible that although it's new, the mobo is busted? I haven't personally tried my ssd on another pc (mostly because I don't have access to one), but, again, the first place I took it to told me all my parts worked (-cpu/mobo).
Things I have tried:
-Changing boot order in BIOS, ensuring AHCI is selected
-Clearing CMOS (multiple times), replacing CMOS battery (brand new)
-Booting to USB (I used a Windows 10 version which I'm 100% certain works because I used it to install windows onto a friends brand new clean ssd literally 2 days ago) which results in freezing on the windows logo, keyboard stopping, freezing on the blank blue screen where language options for the install would usually be displayed, freezing on the language options for the install (which is as far as I ever got on the usb) - it's not that I even wanted to install windows again, I just wanted to see if it'd boot to the usb
-Booting to USB running most recent version of Bunsen Hydrogen
-Checking literally every connection, switching SATA cables around
-Reseating GPU into the top PCI slot (it was interfering with a sound card due to board size but I moved it because at this point I couldn't care less about the damn sound card)
-EDIT Booting to USB running Linux Mint ver 18.0 gave the error codes
[ 5.004820] [drm:drm_add_edid_modes.part.26 [drm]] *ERROR* Unknown HDMI VIC: 50
[ 5.004877] [drm:drm_add_edid_modes.part.26 [drm]] *ERROR* Unknown HDMI VIC: 25
Parts in build:
Intel X79 LGA 2011
Intel i7 4930k @ 3.4Ghz
Corsair CML16GX3M2A1600C10B 16 GB (2x8GB) DDR3, 1600MHz
Samsung 256GB 2.5-inch SSD 840 Pro Series
Seagate Constellation CS ST3000NC000 3.5" 3TB Enterprise
ASUS GTX780 OC Edition (GTX780-DC2OC-3GD5)
Corsair h100i
Seasonic 1250w PSU
OS currently installed on SSD is Windows 7 x64
Any advice on what to do short of taking it back to the pc repair shop or sending the mobo back (which at this point is a high probability) would be very highly valuable
Thanks in advance
So I've just swapped out my mobo from an Asus ROG Rampage IV Extreme to a new, bare-bones generic Intel X79 Motherboard LGA 2011. I can get the PC to boot to bios but it won't boot to my ssd, it displays the 'Reboot or Select Proper Boot Device' error and it's being very pedantic about little things like if I don't let the capacitors shut down completely then there's a chance it won't boot into bios/won't boot to a usb at all, sometimes the keyboard won't be connected (it's lights wont turn on) etc.
I took it to a repair shop a few weeks ago when I was diagnosing why the pc wouldn't boot at all and they told me all the parts were fine except for the cpu/mobo which they couldn't test because they didn't have any LGA2011 parts. I took it to a second place which did have a compatible cpu and they told me the board was busted which was good to know for certain. I bought a new, relatively bare-bones board (as a placeholder until I get new parts [gpu, mobo, cpu]) to get the system up and running again and now I'm having the issues as above.
I think it's possible that although it's new, the mobo is busted? I haven't personally tried my ssd on another pc (mostly because I don't have access to one), but, again, the first place I took it to told me all my parts worked (-cpu/mobo).
Things I have tried:
-Changing boot order in BIOS, ensuring AHCI is selected
-Clearing CMOS (multiple times), replacing CMOS battery (brand new)
-Booting to USB (I used a Windows 10 version which I'm 100% certain works because I used it to install windows onto a friends brand new clean ssd literally 2 days ago) which results in freezing on the windows logo, keyboard stopping, freezing on the blank blue screen where language options for the install would usually be displayed, freezing on the language options for the install (which is as far as I ever got on the usb) - it's not that I even wanted to install windows again, I just wanted to see if it'd boot to the usb
-Booting to USB running most recent version of Bunsen Hydrogen
-Checking literally every connection, switching SATA cables around
-Reseating GPU into the top PCI slot (it was interfering with a sound card due to board size but I moved it because at this point I couldn't care less about the damn sound card)
-EDIT Booting to USB running Linux Mint ver 18.0 gave the error codes
[ 5.004820] [drm:drm_add_edid_modes.part.26 [drm]] *ERROR* Unknown HDMI VIC: 50
[ 5.004877] [drm:drm_add_edid_modes.part.26 [drm]] *ERROR* Unknown HDMI VIC: 25
Parts in build:
Intel X79 LGA 2011
Intel i7 4930k @ 3.4Ghz
Corsair CML16GX3M2A1600C10B 16 GB (2x8GB) DDR3, 1600MHz
Samsung 256GB 2.5-inch SSD 840 Pro Series
Seagate Constellation CS ST3000NC000 3.5" 3TB Enterprise
ASUS GTX780 OC Edition (GTX780-DC2OC-3GD5)
Corsair h100i
Seasonic 1250w PSU
OS currently installed on SSD is Windows 7 x64
Any advice on what to do short of taking it back to the pc repair shop or sending the mobo back (which at this point is a high probability) would be very highly valuable
Thanks in advance