My Acer Nitro 5 (Model AN515-54) Boots Up Slowly and Displays the Incorrect Time

Lexford
Lexford Member Posts: 7 New User
edited December 2023 in 2020 Archives
 I got an Acer Nitro 5 (Model AN515-54) recently on February, and whenever I turn it on after extended periods of being turned off (7 or more hours), it boots up strangely. The keyboard lights and power light turn on then quickly turn off afterward. The lights repeatedly turn on and off for about 30 or more seconds until the Acer logo finally shows up on-screen and I'm able to log in.

 When I log in though, my laptop's clock displays the incorrect time and instead shows the approximate time that it was last shut down in. For example, if I turn off my laptop around 12:35 AM and turn it on around 2:48 PM, my laptop's clock will still be around 12:35 AM. This means that I have to keep syncing the clock every time my Nitro 5 goes through a slow boot-up.

 I turned off Intel's delayed launcher and tested quick startup on and off, and I still get this problem whenever my laptop's been shut down for a long time. How can I fix this problem? It still boots up quickly and displays the correct time whenever its shut-down period is brief.

 Also want to note that before I stopped using a PIN code for my laptop account, every time my Nitro 5 booted up slowly I get an error that required me to reset my PIN code.

Answers

  • batmalin
    batmalin Member Posts: 4,231 Guru
    This sounds like the MB battery is dead. Look at the time in bios when laptop on and after couple of hours off.
    Please click "Yes" if I have answered your question.
    Userbench: https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/31177158

  • Lexford
    Lexford Member Posts: 7 New User
    batmalin said:
    This sounds like the MB battery is dead. Look at the time in bios when laptop on and after couple of hours off.
     What usually makes the MB battery die? Can overheating cause it to malfunction?

     How do I look at the BIOS time? When I look at the task manager startup tab, the top says that the BIOS startup time is usually around 5 seconds.
  • batmalin
    batmalin Member Posts: 4,231 Guru
    edited March 2020
     Usually either faulty battery, old battery used or overheat can cause the issue. I mean bios clock, look if it "remember" the time e.g, now shows 10:00 after 10 hours of powered off it have to show 20:00. Ihe battery is responsible for the system date and clock and some of the options in bios
    Please click "Yes" if I have answered your question.
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  • Lexford
    Lexford Member Posts: 7 New User
    batmalin said:
     Usually either faulty battery, old battery used or overheat can cause the issue. I mean bios clock, look if it "remember" the time e.g, now shows 10:00 after 10 hours of powered off it have to show 20:00. Ihe battery is responsible for the system date and clock and some of the options in bios
     Shoot, my laptop did have a hard crash that required restarting when it overheated once. I have a cooler for it now so it doesn't overheat anymore, but I'm worried that this one crash could have affected my laptop's health permanently

    Checking the BIOS now, the time is currently synced (since I synced it recently). Now I'll just have to wait 10 or so hours while it's shut down to see if the BIOS clock stays correct. If it doesn't, what can I do to fix this? Will I have to change the hardware? And since my laptop has this on/off pattern when booting up after a long shutoff period, can trying to access the BIOS while my laptop is turning on and off corrupt my laptop more?
  • batmalin
    batmalin Member Posts: 4,231 Guru
    First I would advise to change the MB battery if bios time is offsync after 7 to 10 hours off. If not then we have to look for something else faulty.
    Please click "Yes" if I have answered your question.
    Userbench: https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/31177158

  • batmalin
    batmalin Member Posts: 4,231 Guru
    BTW just accessing the bios could not bring any damage.
    Please click "Yes" if I have answered your question.
    Userbench: https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/31177158

  • Lexford
    Lexford Member Posts: 7 New User
    batmalin said:
    First I would advise to change the MB battery if bios time is offsync after 7 to 10 hours off. If not then we have to look for something else faulty.
     I'll let you know what happens next time my laptop experiences a faulty startup, since it booted up normally today.
  • Sjenest
    Sjenest Member Posts: 25 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    Hi Lexford:

     1:try to disable  unnecessary services

     2.Do a disk cleanup as administrator

  • Lexford
    Lexford Member Posts: 7 New User
    batmalin said:
    First I would advise to change the MB battery if bios time is offsync after 7 to 10 hours off. If not then we have to look for something else faulty.
     So my laptop experienced another long startup, and when I opened the BIOS, the time was set to around 8 AM even though the time was actually around 4 PM (I re-synced the time through the BIOS afterward). Guess it might be the MB battery then. Will change it when I get the chance. Will the long startups do serious damage in the long run, or is the incorrect time the only thing I need to worry about?
  • Lexford
    Lexford Member Posts: 7 New User
    Sjenest said:
    Hi Lexford:

     1:try to disable  unnecessary services

     2.Do a disk cleanup as administrator

     Will this help with keeping the clock on time? The long startups don't seem performance-based, but rather hardware-based. Or maybe there is a software that can bug my laptop like this?