Archived from groups: alt.comp.periphs.mainboard.abit (
More info?)
that would be true unless there is no or poor monitoring on the mobo for the
since it is no longer used. many recent mobo's will report a funky voltage
for -12 or -5 because those monitors are either no longer supported or are
being used for something entirely different.
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Thomas Geery
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"w_tom" <w_tom1@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:407EEDD5.ECBCA4DE@hotmail.com...
> Keeping -12 volts in spec is so pathetically easy that
> regulation is often accomplished with only a single chip
> regulator. A whole power supply inside one chip. However
> something is so wrong inside the power supply that even -12
> volts is not correct.
>
> Same reasoning that was used to launch Challenger and to
> stop investigations of what could have avoided the Columbia
> disaster are being used to justify failure on the -12 volts.
> -13 volts on the -12 volt supply is a symptom, maybe, of
> larger or pending problems. Don't justify a symptom that may
> be warning of more serious problems. That is what some did
> even to kill astronauts.
>
> For -12 volts to be -13 or -13.8 volts says something else
> is seriously wrong because maintaining -12 volts is suppose to
> be trivial and easy. Don't waste long reasoning to justify a
> problem that should never exist. -12 volt regulation is
> trivial and could only be that erroneous due to a 'current or
> upcoming' failure.
>
> Jef Norton wrote:
> > I gotta say: How much *current* hardware out there makes use of
> > the -12v and -5v rails? Specifically: How much *current* hardware
> > out there makes use of RS-232 serial interfaces? Ubiquitous -
> > sure. Rarely used these days: also ... sure.
> >
> > Besides, there's a lot of wiggle room there. The RS-232 v.24
> > standard specifies that the Driver Output Signal (loaded minimum)
> > be between +/-5v to +/-15v, the Driver Output Signal (unloaded
> > maximum) be between +/-25v, the Receiver Input Voltage Range be
> > between +/-15v and the Receiver Input Sensitivity be between
> > +/-3v.
> >
> > The RS-232 DB-9 standard uses the negative voltages on the DTE
> > and DCE signal pins. Anything -3v or less on either pin 2 or
> > pin 3 specifies DTE or DCE respectively.
> >
> > I'll agree "cheapo" power supply regulation... but I certainly
> > wouldn't say failing.