by Jondav1120 » Fri Oct 22, 2021 9:29 am
Hi, did you manage to get into the BIOS prior to changing the battery? How long did you leave the battery out for?
Few things to try:
1. It has been my experience with the older motherboard, that when the battery gets low, the BIOS memory will only be partially wiped back to its default settings, with the result that it would do some bizarre things. I've just checked the older motherboard manual from the database, and it appears to have a two position BIOS jumper (normal/clear CMOS). Pop the battery out, find this jumper on the board and move it to the "clear CMOS" position. This should instantly reset the CMOS back to defaults, but to be sure, leave it for a few minutes. Move the jumper back to where it was, and reinstall the BIOS battery. Try a reboot...
2. Disconnect the hard drive and the floppy, and try a reboot...
3. Remove the MIDI and Network cards from their slots on the motherboard, unplug the mouse and try a reboot...
We need to get into the BIOS as a first step to set this correctly, and at the barest minimum this requires a working video card and keyboard. The first step will be to get the video working with nothing connected to the motherboard, set the BIOS correctly and then, reconnect all the disconnected components.
Also, my apologies...I had completely forgotten about the "clear CMOS" option jumper! On a lot of older motherboards this jumper was not there and the only way to clear the CMOS memory was to remove the battery for a reasonable length of time to allow the voltage to dissipate. This time could be significant, depending on the size of the capacitors and the current draw of the memory.
Just a quick warning regarding the older motherboards...! If you disconnect the power supply plugs from the motherboard, make a note how they are connected (I take a picture to remind me). It is possible to connect these up reversed...your motherboard is unlikely to survive this!!!
Best regards
John