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[SOLVED] The CPU has power and generates heat, but the red CPU indicator on the motherboard remains lit.

Cimexl

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Jul 28, 2017
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I just built a new PC with some new components and a few from my old PC.

My New Build:

  1. Motherboard: MSI Project Zero B650m
  2. CPU: Ryzen 9 9900X
  3. RAM: TEAM T-FORCE DELTA RAM 32GBx2 (64GB total)
  4. PSU: Seasonic Focus Gold GX-650
  5. CPU Cooler: Prime Premium Galatek 240
I only transferred one SATA SSD, one HDD, and a GTX 1660 GPU.

My PC powers on; the fans, RAM lights, AIO LED, and GPU all light up. At first, I thought the CPU wasn’t receiving power, but it does get warm. Everything seems to be working, but the CPU LED indicator on the motherboard remains lit, and the monitor doesn’t display anything. Does anyone know why this could be happening?
 
I just built a new PC with some new components and a few from my old PC.

My New Build:

  1. Motherboard: MSI Project Zero B650m
  2. CPU: Ryzen 9 9900X
  3. RAM: TEAM T-FORCE DELTA RAM 32GBx2 (64GB total)
  4. PSU: Seasonic Focus Gold GX-650
  5. CPU Cooler: Prime Premium Galatek 240
I only transferred one SATA SSD, one HDD, and a GTX 1660 GPU.

My PC powers on; the fans, RAM lights, AIO LED, and GPU all light up. At first, I thought the CPU wasn’t receiving power, but it does get warm. Everything seems to be working, but the CPU LED indicator on the motherboard remains lit, and the monitor doesn’t display anything. Does anyone know why this could be happening?
Unplug all disk...test.
Remove the gpu and connect to the igp....test.

If it still does not work at least you know somethings it's not.
 
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Sorry, it turns out that after the BIOS update, when I turned my PC back on, the motherboard LED took about 2-3 minutes to reach the boot menu. After adjusting the RAM position, everything is finally back to normal. Thank you for your help; I really appreciate it.
 
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Same here, I was worried the first time I powered up my 7950X rig. I wasn't used to extended DDR5 memory training times. I now just sit back and wait after updating the BIOS.
I know on ROG boards there is a setting to reduce the load times ..

Enable Context Restore in the DDR Settings menu of BIOS, you might have another one boot after that which is long, but subsequent boots should be much quicker..

This was pulled from a Asus forum thread but it does the trick only catch is it needs to be done after every bios update

Kinda like enabling Expo every bios update !!