Author Topic: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals  (Read 6586 times)

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Offline m4rtinTopic starter

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Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« on: December 04, 2018, 07:30:36 pm »
I bought an used Asus B85M-G motherboard which reboots endlessly with one second intervals:
https://youtu.be/X47XmcAWnTM

It does not even seem to enter the POST. CPU is Intel Core i7-4790K which is supported by this motherboard. So is the Crucial CT102464BA160B.C16 8GiB memory module which is installed to DIMM A1 slot. Rest of the expansion cards are uninstalled. Both 24 pin ATX connector and P4 connector are connected to motherboard. I tried with two different power supplies: Chieftec GPS-400AA-101A and SilverStone SST-ST1200. I also tried to clear the CMOS both using the jumper and removing and re-inserting the CR20312 battery. Using my old MSI H81M-P33 motherboard with the same CPU, memory module and SST-ST1200 PSU everything works fine. I also connected the PC speaker to Asus B85M-G, but there are no error-code beeps. Visually, all the pins in the LGA1150 socket and the board in general looks fine. The only small defect, which I was able to detect, is a small dent on that capacitor above the PCI Express ×16 slot.

What might cause such behavior? Is it possible to troubleshoot this further?
« Last Edit: December 04, 2018, 07:33:06 pm by m4rtin »
 

Offline HB9EVI

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #1 on: December 04, 2018, 08:19:02 pm »
could be a capacitor issue

did you have a high power gfx card in that pcie slot? the capacitor doesn't really look bulged, but if it was exposed to a lot of heat, it can simply be dried out
 

Offline Rasz

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #2 on: December 04, 2018, 08:46:04 pm »
have you looked at the pins in the socket?
might also be shorted and looks like rebooting when psu protection triggers
and might be standby supply fried in the board, known asrock fault
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Offline m4rtinTopic starter

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #3 on: December 04, 2018, 09:54:50 pm »
could be a capacitor issue

did you have a high power gfx card in that pcie slot? the capacitor doesn't really look bulged, but if it was exposed to a lot of heat, it can simply be dried out

I guess the previous owner did because he has slightly modified the DIMM slots. Probably in order to fit the long graphics card.

Are polymer electrolytic capacitors also prone to dry out? I thought that those have no dry-out behavior.


have you looked at the pins in the socket?
might also be shorted and looks like rebooting when psu protection triggers
and might be standby supply fried in the board, known asrock fault

Yes, I inspected the pins in the socket and those are at least visually perfectly fine.
 

Offline vidarr

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #4 on: December 05, 2018, 12:28:09 am »
Try Re-seat the RAM if you didn't already. Actually, re-seat everything. I unplug/disconnect everything. Then, connect only the absolute bare minimum to run. If that doesn't work, I start swapping out components until I find the problem. If still no problem, it is something soldered to the MB that went bad. Unless, it is the BIOS settings, but I doubt it (did you change anything in there?).
 

Offline perieanuo

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #5 on: December 05, 2018, 10:32:11 am »
hi,
plug just atx power/memory/processor/cooler(even processor may resist some seconds without but maybe mobo shuts down if not seeing pulses from cooling processor's fan)
and course reset cmos before that
courage!
 

Offline wraper

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #6 on: December 05, 2018, 10:48:21 am »
What is that crap between of RAM chips? Inspect pins on CPU socket with some sort of magnifier.
 

Offline Rasz

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #7 on: December 05, 2018, 05:57:16 pm »
watched the clip, might be just psu protection
get a dmm and measure all the power rails in diode mode on the unplugged board
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Offline lordvader88

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #8 on: December 07, 2018, 04:30:36 am »
watched the clip, might be just psu protection
get a dmm and measure all the power rails in diode mode on the unplugged board
PSU's certainly power-cycle like that at clockwork when they have a problem, or something connected to them is shorted and drawing way too much current.


IDK what fault protection is on mobo's or CPU's that would reboot the PSU

But PSU's will power cycle just like that, taking about a second.

OK so u did list the PSU and try 2 of them (missed that) Sounds like the PSU is reacting to something bad tho, and overcurrent protection keeps tripping.

Do u have a DMM and/or oscilloscope ?
« Last Edit: December 07, 2018, 04:39:09 am by lordvader88 »
 

Offline m4rtinTopic starter

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #9 on: December 08, 2018, 03:28:26 pm »
Try Re-seat the RAM if you didn't already. Actually, re-seat everything. I unplug/disconnect everything. Then, connect only the absolute bare minimum to run. If that doesn't work, I start swapping out components until I find the problem. If still no problem, it is something soldered to the MB that went bad. Unless, it is the BIOS settings, but I doubt it (did you change anything in there?).

I did it already. In addition, I cleared the BIOS/UEFI settings. I'm pretty sure that it is something wrong with the motherboard.

hi,
plug just atx power/memory/processor/cooler(even processor may resist some seconds without but maybe mobo shuts down if not seeing pulses from cooling processor's fan)
and course reset cmos before that
courage!
That is the exact setup I had in the video in my initial post except that P4 connector was also connected.

What is that crap between of RAM chips? Inspect pins on CPU socket with some sort of magnifier.

It was dust. I removed it with compressed air. I did inspect pins on CPU socket using a magnifier and very good light conditions, but they seem to be perfectly fine.

Rasz, lordvader88,

I came to same conclusion when I connected PSU 24-pin ATX12V 2.x connector to my known working MSI H81M-P33 motherboard, shorted PS_ON with ground and the PSU LED stayed green and PSU stayed working. When I did exactly the same with this problematic Asus B85M-G motherboard(as seen on the image, I also replaced the possibly faulty capacitor above the PCI-e slot), then the PSU started power-cycling as seen the video in my first post. I tried to measure voltages, but those did not seem to be abnormal. On the other hand, maybe my DMM simply didn't detect the reading fast enough. So I also guess that this is either a PSU over-current or short circuit protection.

Do u have a DMM and/or oscilloscope ?

I do have a DMM. I don't have oscilloscope, but I could buy one if it helps troubleshooting.

get a dmm and measure all the power rails in diode mode on the unplugged board

Is there a way to know if voltage drop value or open line is normal or not when I don't have an exactly the same board for comparison or schematic with those values? In addition, there are overwhelming number of points to measure.. I mean I could put the red probe into ground in diode mode, but where should I connect the black one? :P What would be a good starting point?
 

Offline Rasz

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #10 on: December 08, 2018, 06:44:45 pm »
Is there a way to know if voltage drop value or open line is normal or not when I don't have an exactly the same board for comparison or schematic with those values? In addition, there are overwhelming number of points to measure.. I mean I could put the red probe into ground in diode mode, but where should I connect the black one? :P What would be a good starting point?

black into one of screw holes (ground), red into ATX/P4 power connectors, google the pinout and look for shorts

you can also check bare board (no ram, no cpu, no cards), it should still power up and do nothing, it shouldnt powercycle
« Last Edit: December 08, 2018, 06:46:37 pm by Rasz »
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Offline m4rtinTopic starter

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #11 on: December 09, 2018, 01:55:04 pm »
Is there a way to know if voltage drop value or open line is normal or not when I don't have an exactly the same board for comparison or schematic with those values? In addition, there are overwhelming number of points to measure.. I mean I could put the red probe into ground in diode mode, but where should I connect the black one? :P What would be a good starting point?

black into one of screw holes (ground), red into ATX/P4 power connectors, google the pinout and look for shorts

I made the measurements, but I'm not sure that I'm able to interpret those:



The only odd thing, that I noticed, is that in case of Asus B85M-G, the +12V is 1.291 when measuring on the 24-pin connector, but it was 1.(should mean open line) when I measured on P4 connector.


you can also check bare board (no ram, no cpu, no cards), it should still power up and do nothing, it shouldnt powercycle

I did exactly that. Known working MSI H81M-P33 motherboard didn't powercycle while the problematic Asus B85M-G did.
 

Offline janoc

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #12 on: December 09, 2018, 02:16:20 pm »
That looks like a 5V and/or 3.3V rail short to ground somewhere, those values are waaay too low. The MSI values are a bit more normal (around a 1-2 PN junction forward voltages, which gives anything between 0.2 - 1.5V, depending on the type of component connected). 0.015V is effectively a dead short, you are measuring a voltage drop across the wires/traces only.

You can also reverse the probes and compare the values - if they stay the same low value, it is almost certainly a short. A good PN junction would show a forward voltage in one direction and open circuit (OL) or a higher value in the other.

However, do make sure you let the measurement stabilize before writing the value down - there are tons of capacitors connected between the power rails and ground and those will affect the reading while they are charging up or discharging.

A dead short on one of the power rails would definitely explain your power supply behavior (restarting/oscillation).
« Last Edit: December 09, 2018, 02:26:59 pm by janoc »
 

Offline m4rtinTopic starter

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #13 on: December 09, 2018, 05:10:52 pm »
That looks like a 5V and/or 3.3V rail short to ground somewhere, those values are waaay too low. The MSI values are a bit more normal (around a 1-2 PN junction forward voltages, which gives anything between 0.2 - 1.5V, depending on the type of component connected). 0.015V is effectively a dead short, you are measuring a voltage drop across the wires/traces only.

You can also reverse the probes and compare the values - if they stay the same low value, it is almost certainly a short. A good PN junction would show a forward voltage in one direction and open circuit (OL) or a higher value in the other.

However, do make sure you let the measurement stabilize before writing the value down - there are tons of capacitors connected between the power rails and ground and those will affect the reading while they are charging up or discharging.

A dead short on one of the power rails would definitely explain your power supply behavior (restarting/oscillation).

I reversed the probes and for 3.3V and 5V the readings were the same:




Quote
However, do make sure you let the measurement stabilize before writing the value down - there are tons of capacitors connected between the power rails and ground and those will affect the reading while they are charging up or discharging.

Yes, I let each measurement to stabilize at least 10 seconds.


So probably a component on 3.3V and/or 5V trail is shorted? Is there a way to find out which one? I have seen videos where people apply some current to trace and look for a hot component.
 

Offline janoc

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #14 on: December 09, 2018, 06:32:40 pm »
So probably a component on 3.3V and/or 5V trail is shorted? Is there a way to find out which one? I have seen videos where people apply some current to trace and look for a hot component.

That's going to be a tough one, especially when you don't have a schematic of the board and it is a multilayer board.

You could apply power from a power supply, but unless you have a thermal camera that is going to be looking for a needle in a haystack. Even with a camera it is not guaranteed, it could be a tiny capacitor shorting somewhere and difficult to find with a consumer-level camera.

I would start checking all the local power regulators for the CPU, chipsets, etc. However, it could literally be a blown bypass cap in some odd corner causing the issue. Or it could be e.g. a blown USB controller or some part of the CPU chipset. Then you would be in a world of pain.

I am not sure I would go into hunt like that, that's going to take a very long time, with no guarantee of result. Given the price of a new MB    I doubt it is an economical repair. Of course, if you want to do it for learning purposes, by all means.
 

Offline m4rtinTopic starter

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #15 on: December 09, 2018, 07:16:34 pm »
I applied power from the motherboard and carefully touched the every inch of the motherboard, but didn't feel any abnormal heat. I'm afraid I need to give up at this point. However, thank you everybody for sharing your knowledge!
 

Offline janoc

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #16 on: December 09, 2018, 07:32:04 pm »
I applied power from the motherboard and carefully touched the every inch of the motherboard, but didn't feel any abnormal heat. I'm afraid I need to give up at this point. However, thank you everybody for sharing your knowledge!

You would need to provide a lot of current for anything on the board to get hot. Keep in mind that a computer motherboard is designed to take amperes of current on each rail, in addition to what the CPU and the GPU(s) take. 
 

Offline Rasz

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #17 on: December 09, 2018, 08:46:25 pm »
I made the measurements, but I'm not sure that I'm able to interpret those:

Was that measurement with power supply plugged?  3.3 and 5V should not be correlated with each other. Im trying to come up with a scenario that could cause that and hmm, fried voltage monitoring chip? even 12 and -12 are pulled down.
Can you measure straight resistance on 12 -12 3.3 and 5?

I did exactly that. Known working MSI H81M-P33 motherboard didn't powercycle while the problematic Asus B85M-G did.

you didnt plug aux power, but it might not matter much in those circumstances
green led means at least standby circuit seems to be ok

I applied power from the motherboard and carefully touched the every inch of the motherboard, but didn't feel any abnormal heat. I'm afraid I need to give up at this point. However, thank you everybody for sharing your knowledge!

you cant do that with ATX supply since its powercycling, and standby doesnt count. You would need 3 lab supplies set to 3.3, 5 and 12. I would be reluctant injecting just one rail, stuff doesnt like that (latchup).


Given the price of a new MB    I doubt it is an economical repair.
there are no new 1150 left, this one can even do some overclocking I think, used ones start at >=$50, add price of CPU and DDR3-to-DDR4 difference and repair slowly starts making sense
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My fireplace is on fire, but in all the wrong places.
 

Offline janoc

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #18 on: December 09, 2018, 10:20:44 pm »

there are no new 1150 left, this one can even do some overclocking I think, used ones start at >=$50, add price of CPU and DDR3-to-DDR4 difference and repair slowly starts making sense

Only if you don't value your time - and that assumes it is something actually repairable by a home gamer.
 

Offline Hogwild

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Re: Asus B85M-G motherboard reboots with one second intervals
« Reply #19 on: December 09, 2018, 11:50:33 pm »
Did you verify that nothing is underneath the mobo, shorting any of the connections? Are you using plastic standoffs or metal? Did you disconnect all fans?
 


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