Aspire E3-111-P60S - Clear BIOS Settings?

Will94
Will94 Member Posts: 2 New User

I got my new Acer Aspire from UPS yesterday.  I installed 8GB of memory and then went into the BIOS to look at all of the settings.  I changed two or three of them.  I know I set F12 to produce a boot menu, and I disabled the Acer splash screen.  I thought that I would see startup details (memory counting up, BIOS version, etc) if I disabled it.  I then installed openSUSE Tumbleweed (their rolling release) from a thumb drive.  The installation went perfectly.

 

However, I can't get back into the BIOS.  I have absolutely no video until I am about 4 or 5 seconds into the openSUSE boot process, then the video is fine from that point on.  I ran into a problem with Tumbleweed and tried to force a downgrade to openSUSE 13.2 (regular, non-rolling release).  Now I have a mixed system, and my wireless no longer works.  I expected that, but it was worth a shot.

 

However, I can't boot off of another thumb drive to replace my OS.  I had set the thumb drive as the #1 boot device when I was in the BIOS, but it doesn't seem to have taken.  If I try to boot off of a thumb drive, nothing happens.  I get both green lights on the laptop, a beep (like it's starting to boot), and then it just sits there black.  I let it sit for almost an hour last night.  I've looked for a way to reset the BIOS settings (desktops usually have a jumper for this), but I can't find anything.  Without being able to boot off of an external device (I also tried a USB DVD drive), I am left with a laptop with a broken OS.

 

I would greatly appreciate and help and/or advice!  Thank you.

 

Answers

  • Will94
    Will94 Member Posts: 2 New User

    Fixed my own problem.  I pulled the hard drive from the machine and then started it.  That got me access to the BIOS, where I set USB CD/DVD as the number one boot device and HDD as number two.  As I never hook the DVD drive up except for installations, that should work well.  OpenSUSE Leap beta1 is installing as I type! 

     

    Funny thing is, when I put the HDD back, the weird video blackout happened again.  When the video infally appeared, I was already well into the boot process for the openSUSE installation DVD.  Weird.