MOBO not powering down with OS Shutdown? |
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Geardaddy
Newbie Joined: 14 Feb 2019 Location: Maryland Status: Offline Points: 9 |
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Posted: 14 Feb 2019 at 8:26pm |
Hello All,
Looking for some guidance. I just completed a build (Only my second one) and most of it is working as expected. The problem I'm having is when I do "shutdown" from windows, my motherboard appears to remain powered. The CPU fan continues to run, and a light remains illuminated on the GPU, as well as the lights on the front panel of the case. I did a lot of digging on these forums and I think I have done most of what I can. This computer was a "rebuild" of my last one. I re-used the case, HDD's, and PSU (650Watt corsair gold). To be specific, the when I do a shutdown from windows, after it "shuts down" I'm able to power it off completely with the power button by holding it down. This is obviously not ideal. Build consists of: ASRock B450 Pro4 ATX Ryzen 5 2600 EGVA GTX1080Ti SC2 G.SKILL Aegis 16GB (2 x 8GB) 288-Pin DDR4 SDRAM DDR4 3000 SSD with Microsoft windows 7 Home Premium (This drive was in use with current install of windows on old machine) ASUS DVD drive. What I've done: -Flash/updated Bios to 1.8 -Combed through BIOS settings and disabled "deep sleep" mode. -Moved memory sticks from positions A2/B2 to A1/B1, then tried each individual memory stick in position A1. -Tried startup/shutdown sequence with following devices unplugged: Front panel headers HD Audio connector Front panel USB3 connector Ethernet cable in the back. - Unplugged and verified front panel power/led/HDD cables in proper position, and tried reversing +/- polarity of power sw. Open to suggestions, and I"m really hoping It's something little that I've overlooked. I do want to upgrade to windows 10 but I haven't because I don't want to loose all of the programs that are on the PC now. Perhaps updating to win10 would solve this? Thanks for any info! John |
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Geardaddy
Newbie Joined: 14 Feb 2019 Location: Maryland Status: Offline Points: 9 |
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Short followup.. This morning I booted into Windows safe mode, and then did a shutdown.. The computer is shutting down properly when commenced from Safe mode.. I'm starting to think it's a software/driver thing vs motherboard problem/fault?
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xhue
Groupie Joined: 17 Aug 2018 Status: Offline Points: 634 |
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2 things here:
- moving the same Widows installation between builds in never a good idea. - I've seen qiute a lot cases wiyh symptoms like yours. |
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Geardaddy
Newbie Joined: 14 Feb 2019 Location: Maryland Status: Offline Points: 9 |
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Xhue,
Thank you for the response.. Windows 10 is enroute and I?™ll see if that takes care of it! I knew it wasn?™t a good idea but figured I?™d give it a try. I?™m researching how to move my data and programs over to Win10.. I?™m wondering if I can make a bootable clone via ?śbackup and restore??on win7 (on an external drive) then full install win10 and do a ?śrestore?? Any idea if this works? Thanks again, John |
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xhue
Groupie Joined: 17 Aug 2018 Status: Offline Points: 634 |
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My advice - DO NOT MIGRATE any program or installation from one place to another! I can't stress this enough!
The only times you can afford direct copy/paste are portable apps, save/project data, multimedia files and VM containers. That's it. Different OS (or builds for that matter) have (or need) different HAL settings, different registry hives (Win), different folder structures, etc. If you old HDD has programs you no longer have the installation files, licenses (cracks?) for, that's another story. I could in theory help but most likely I simply won't. Here is how I circumvent similar issues - on all my machines I have a disposable OS disk (not only partitions!) or disposable disk for the VM hypervisor. All the rest is hosted on networked storage. This of course cost a lot, but I put it as a goal a long time ago and boy, it was worth it! I can now wipe or lose my entire OS disk and I couldn't care less. Heck I often do experiments which end with a need for total rebuild. Bottom line - if it's not a standalone file, re-deploy from scratch. |
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Geardaddy
Newbie Joined: 14 Feb 2019 Location: Maryland Status: Offline Points: 9 |
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Xhue!
Wow, thank you for the detailed response! Sounds like my idea would have set me up for problems down the road! Thanks for saving me on that one.. lol. I hate to admit, but I?™m primarily a Mac guy so I?™m not used to having to wipe a hard disk clean in order to upgrade the os.. I certainly will on this though, most of my games are steam or origin, so that shouldn?™t be much of a problem.. I was able to follow your post until the server part, then my knowledge ran out.. I do have win 10 pro on the way, so I?™ll get it loaded next week. Really hoping that fixes my power down/sleep issues! John |
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xhue
Groupie Joined: 17 Aug 2018 Status: Offline Points: 634 |
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Once your Win 10 arrives, make sure that:
1. You check all cabling, RAM, etc. are well seated. 2. Clear CMOS 3. Enable only XMP profiles and disable CSM (you may need to ditch the DVD on boot if you want CSM disabled) 4. Plop Win 10 (preferably get the latest .iso from MS' website and burn with Rufus) 5. Download the respective drivers from nvidia, AMD, etc. |
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Geardaddy
Newbie Joined: 14 Feb 2019 Location: Maryland Status: Offline Points: 9 |
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Windows arrived today, so I'll get to working on this tomorrow. I have a few more questions about your steps if you don't mind!
Looked into Rufus, and understand how to get the .iso file onto a USB drive with rufus.. Specifically, what does "Plop windows" mean? So sorry, I'm a pilot by trade, not a computer guy! Also, what are the benefits/reasons for disabling CSM? Really appreciate all of your help, I'm going to follow your directions precisely! |
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xhue
Groupie Joined: 17 Aug 2018 Status: Offline Points: 634 |
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Ah, a fellow pilot! Nice! Although I've only flew sims and held the yoke of a friend's Cessna in mid-air, I have huge ambitions getting a license myself soon.
As a pilot, you've dealt with checklists all your life, so I decided I make you another one. I hope it's easier for you. Disclaimer: I always get giggity when flying comes out in a conversation. Please excuse my poor attempts at humor. I'll try to keep the slang at minimum, so other less-pilot(ish) people can follow too. Also, the punchlist will skip certain trivial steps for the sake of clarity. First, some clarifications - CSM mean legacy BIOS architecture will be used system-wide, which is compatible with some older HW. Disabling it allows one to utilize the newer UEFI standard and allows for enabling some security enchancements like Secure Boot. I recommend you disable CSM. Now, onwards unto the horizon! - download the latest .iso from Microsoft's website. - download Rufus portable. - burn the .iso with Rufus. - power down the PC. - unplug the power cord from the wall. - check RAM seating, cables and connectors too. - clear the CMOS by moving the jumper in position (check manual if unsure). - leave the CMOS jumper in its new position for some good 20 sec. - return the CMOS jumper to its original resting place. - plug the power cord back in the APU, err, the wall. - plug the USB with Windows in some USB port. - turn on the PC. - you should hear M1 spooling up (I mean the CPU fan of course). - enter BIOS. - enable only XMP profile for the RAM. - diable CSM from 'Boot' menu. - save and exit BIOS. - try booting from USB, aim for the option that has 'UEFI' in it. - we're now at V1, no turning back. - if you see Windows logo then rotate! - if you got to this step, congrats - you almost plopped Windows. - tune the setup options to your liking. - after Windows is airborne, gearup that mofo, i.e. wait for it to finish with its post-install stuff (leave it alone for 20 min). - download only AMD chipset drivers from AMD. - download the GPU driver from their website. - enjoy. After all this you should have a stable and fast PC. Some additional tuning may be required afterwards, but that's also easy. Have fun! |
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Geardaddy
Newbie Joined: 14 Feb 2019 Location: Maryland Status: Offline Points: 9 |
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Now that's a checklist!! Excellent! I can't thank you enough for dumbing this down for me!
Truth be told, the reason I upgraded this computer is so that I can run either Microsoft flight sim, or XPlane at high frame rates/video settings. Although my regular job is flying 737's, I will be starting to teach my 15 year old son to fly in the coming months. The avionics/nav stuff seems very good on the sims, and beats paying 150 dollar an hour burning gas to learn how to push buttons! Highly recommend getting your PPL, it's a really rewarding process and it's something you have for a lifetime! If there is anything I can help with/answer questions about please don't hesitate to reach out.. Shoot me a pm and I can give you a good contact number. Heck, if you lived in Maryland, I"d take you up sometime and let you do some flying! I'll report back later this evening on how it's coming along with the windows install! Cheers! |
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