What does 4 short beeps on start up mean

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emiko100
emiko100 Member Posts: 1 New User

Computer was running fine until 5 days ago when it stopped booting. Power to the CPU and system fan but no POST beeps or error messages. I replaced power supply no change. I replaced mother board with an identical one and now when I power on it gives 4 short beeps and nothing else. Have tried replacing memory chips and hard drive with no luck. I have disconnected all perphs and tried booting from DVD with Windows 8 disk, nothing except the beeps. What are these beeps telling me?

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  • DylanBradbury
    DylanBradbury Member Posts: 1 New User
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    Hey!

    Four short beeps at startup means diffent things depending on the motherboard manufacturer.

     

    This site can be helpfuly for figuring out what each beep code means to each manufacturer:

     

    http://www.computerhope.com/beep.htm

     

     

    You mentioned four short beeps; with an AMI it means System Timer Failure.

     

    These are the steps to resovle it: (from: http://www.howtogeek.com/forum/topic/4-beebs-at-start-then-nothing-happens)

     

    (1) If any new hardware has been recently added to the computer, remove that hardware to make sure it is not the causing the issue. If after removing the new hardware and your computer works, it's likely that the computer is either not compatible with the new hardware device or a system setting needs to be changed to work with the new hardware.

    (2) Remove any disks, CD's, DVD's that are in the computer and if any USB devices are connected disconnect all of them. Reboot the computer and see if anything changes.

    (3) Make sure all fans are running in the computer. If a fan has failed (especially the heat sink fan for the CPU) your computer could be overheating and/or detecting the fan failure causing the computer not to boot.

    (4) If the above recommendations still have not resolved the irregular POST, attempt to disconnect the Riser board (if applicable) and/or each of the expansion cards. If this resolves the issue or allows the computer to POST, connect one card at a time until you determine what card is causing the issue.

    (5) Disconnect the IDE, SATA, SCSI, or other data cables of the CD-ROM, hard drive, and floppy drive from the Motherboard. If this resolves your irregular POST or you now get an error message attempt to re-connect each device one at a time to determine which device and/or cable is causing the issue. In some situations it can simply be a loose cable connection.

    (6) In some situations a computer may have power related issues often caused by either the power supply and/or the Motherboard. To help determine if this is the cause of your issue try turning the computer on, off, and back on as fast as possible, making sure the computer power light goes on and off each time. In some situations you may be able to temporarily get the computer to boot.

    (7) For users who are more comfortable working with the inside of their computer or who have built their computer, one last recommendation before assuming hardware is faulty, is to reseat the CPU by removing it and putting it back into the computer.

    If after doing all of the above, you continue to have the same issue, unfortunately it is likely that you have a faulty Motherboard, PSU, CPU, and/or RAM. The next step would be either to replace these components and/or have the computer serviced. If you plan on doing the repairs yourself or you are a repair shop it is suggested that you replace the Motherboard first, RAM, CPU, and then power supply in that order and/or try swappable parts from other computers.

     

    Best of luck.