![]() That's what makes no sense: why it works with the A6 but not a Zen1 CPU. I will post another reply with the results, I hope this is it and it's user error.Ĭlick to expand.I think every version should work with an 1800x, all the way back to the very first (except vK0). I have not updated the chipset driver, and will be doing that immediately. This is the same for both Ryzen CPUs, however with the A6 the computer is able to complete POST and boot normally. I do not have a buzzer on the mobo to hear if a beep code is being played. So I end up with no debug lights lit, but my computer is still in POST (no display, all fans at full speed). What is happening is the CPU debug light stays on for about 2 seconds (normally half a second), and then it goes out as if it completed the check, but it doesn't move to the next component as it should. However, if I forgot to insert RAM, the CPU light would flash, then RAM light would stay on, no other lights. For instance, a normal post has each light(CPU, RAM, VGA, BOOT) flash as it tests the component, then the next one flashes as it gets tested. Normally if something was wrong the debug light for that component would stay lit. Not too sure what it could be at this point, I can see the different bios versions displayed in bios.Ĭlick to expand.When I try to start they computer it stops mid post. I have tried 1 stick, 2 stick, 4 stick in all combinations I have swapped ram, both speed and slot, and no difference (2x 8GB 2666, 2x 16 GB 3200) I have let the computer sit mid post for an hour and no difference. I have taken out the CMOS battery for about an hour and no difference. post, bios, m-flash, reboot, select aio file.I went to the MSI website and checked the compatibility section for my mobo and cpu, I needed BIOS AC, flashed that and tried again with both chips, still won't post. So I then took my old Ryzen 3 1800x and tried that with both BIOS versions, didn't post. Swapped again and updated to latest beta (AI), and it still didn't work. So I bought an A6-9500 and updated to the latest stable bios (AKM), checked out the speed (abysmally slow), and then shut down to swap CPUs. Obviously when I first put the CPU in it didn't post, needed to update the BIOS. I know my monitor is working fine because it turns on when I connect it to my nintendo switch.Īs a bonus, if anyone knows why my pc was taking so long to boot up I would love to know.Replaced my old B350m Bazooka with a Mortar Arctic due to a broken PCI slot and only having dedicated GPU. I tried connecting via vga to the monitor and nothing. I have also tried disconnecting my graphics card and connecting directly the hdmi to the monitor and nothing. I tried doing the cmos reset by removing the battery for 20+ minutes and nothing. My computer was still on, my keyboard still lit up, the leds on and the fans as well.īy now I have tried lots of things. So the BIOS updates to 100% and suddenly I get a black screen. So I restart my computer and start updating the bios with m-flash as I had done before with my ryzen 3 1200. So I downloaded the 7A39v2L on a usb without the readme text file. I checked and I had the 2.2 bios currently installed. So I thought that maybe I needed to update my BIOS. Then I thought I had malware and ran malwarebytes and no malware was on my pc. At first I thought it was because my hard drive was really old so I changed that to an ssd and the boot up time improved by like 1 minute. It would take ages, literally 13 minutes. Except when my pc needed to restart or boot up from zero. When I upgraded to my ryI did a bios update to make sure the mobo was compatible and everything then worked perfectly.
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