BIOS issues?
-
- Posts: 785
- Joined: Fri Aug 12, 2011 1:24 am
BIOS issues?
I have an older Acer Aspire 5755 laptop purchased in early 2012. Last
time I booted it about a month ago, it was okay.
Today, it will not boot into Windows w/o going into bios settings.
On bootup, it does not display F2 or F12 (change boot device).
I can get it to boot Windows if I exit w/o saving.
I did a bios update from within Windows 7 up to the one before UEFI, 1.20?
Did a restore of a July, 2015 Windows.
Same thing happening.
Suspect I may have motherboard issues. This computer has no warranties
on it at all anymore.
I tried to run Memtest86+ and cannot boot the USB drive. Windows itself
did a rather short test and found no issues.
Comments welcome.
Mary
time I booted it about a month ago, it was okay.
Today, it will not boot into Windows w/o going into bios settings.
On bootup, it does not display F2 or F12 (change boot device).
I can get it to boot Windows if I exit w/o saving.
I did a bios update from within Windows 7 up to the one before UEFI, 1.20?
Did a restore of a July, 2015 Windows.
Same thing happening.
Suspect I may have motherboard issues. This computer has no warranties
on it at all anymore.
I tried to run Memtest86+ and cannot boot the USB drive. Windows itself
did a rather short test and found no issues.
Comments welcome.
Mary
-
- Posts: 1682
- Joined: Fri Aug 12, 2011 12:51 am
Re: BIOS issues?
You could try resetting the BIOS options to the default/optimal values (there should be an option in the BIOS to do this). Make note of current settings first so you can change any back to what they should be.
Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard, for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it forgets everything.
Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard, for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it forgets everything.
-
- Posts: 785
- Joined: Fri Aug 12, 2011 1:24 am
Re: BIOS issues?
I played with hitting a few key on the keyboard.Just going down the row
The next time I booted, it went to the Windows login-in screen.
Some of the number keys seem to stick up too little so will shut down
and do some more key hitting!!!
Thanks for the suggestion of the keyboard.
Mary
On 10/28/2015 1:01 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
> You could try resetting the BIOS options to the default/optimal values (there should be an option in the BIOS to do this). Make note of current settings first so you can change any back to what they should be.
>
> Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard, for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
>
> If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it forgets everything.
>
>
The next time I booted, it went to the Windows login-in screen.
Some of the number keys seem to stick up too little so will shut down
and do some more key hitting!!!
Thanks for the suggestion of the keyboard.
Mary
On 10/28/2015 1:01 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
> You could try resetting the BIOS options to the default/optimal values (there should be an option in the BIOS to do this). Make note of current settings first so you can change any back to what they should be.
>
> Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard, for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
>
> If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it forgets everything.
>
>
-
- Posts: 785
- Joined: Fri Aug 12, 2011 1:24 am
Re: BIOS issues?
Earlier it is possible one key WAS sticking. I would get noise
when I attempted to exit the bios.
The 3 & 4 and the e & r keys are lower than the others.
It is going back into the bios again.
Can I just work around this since I can get Windows to boot?
I do have a new keyboard but this computer got messed up replacing the
one on it so am reluctant to have it done.
Thanks
Mary
On 10/28/2015 5:34 PM, MJNelson wrote:
> I played with hitting a few key on the keyboard.Just going down the row
> The next time I booted, it went to the Windows login-in screen.
>
> Some of the number keys seem to stick up too little so will shut down
> and do some more key hitting!!!
>
> Thanks for the suggestion of the keyboard.
> Mary
>
> On 10/28/2015 1:01 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
>> You could try resetting the BIOS options to the default/optimal values (there should be an option in the BIOS to do this). Make note of current settings first so you can change any back to what they should be.
>>
>> Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard, for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
>>
>> If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it forgets everything.
>>
>>
>
>
when I attempted to exit the bios.
The 3 & 4 and the e & r keys are lower than the others.
It is going back into the bios again.
Can I just work around this since I can get Windows to boot?
I do have a new keyboard but this computer got messed up replacing the
one on it so am reluctant to have it done.
Thanks
Mary
On 10/28/2015 5:34 PM, MJNelson wrote:
> I played with hitting a few key on the keyboard.Just going down the row
> The next time I booted, it went to the Windows login-in screen.
>
> Some of the number keys seem to stick up too little so will shut down
> and do some more key hitting!!!
>
> Thanks for the suggestion of the keyboard.
> Mary
>
> On 10/28/2015 1:01 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
>> You could try resetting the BIOS options to the default/optimal values (there should be an option in the BIOS to do this). Make note of current settings first so you can change any back to what they should be.
>>
>> Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard, for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
>>
>> If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it forgets everything.
>>
>>
>
>
-
- Posts: 785
- Joined: Fri Aug 12, 2011 1:24 am
Re: BIOS issues?
Is it possible to just work-around the booting problem since I cannot
find the problem key(s) on the keyboard?
I can get into Windows in a round-about way.
Mary
On 10/28/2015 5:53 PM, MJNelson wrote:
> Earlier it is possible one key WAS sticking. I would get noise
> when I attempted to exit the bios.
>
> The 3 & 4 and the e & r keys are lower than the others.
>
> It is going back into the bios again.
>
> Can I just work around this since I can get Windows to boot?
>
> I do have a new keyboard but this computer got messed up replacing the
> one on it so am reluctant to have it done.
> Thanks
> Mary
>
> On 10/28/2015 5:34 PM, MJNelson wrote:
>> I played with hitting a few key on the keyboard.Just going down the row
>> The next time I booted, it went to the Windows login-in screen.
>>
>> Some of the number keys seem to stick up too little so will shut down
>> and do some more key hitting!!!
>>
>> Thanks for the suggestion of the keyboard.
>> Mary
>>
>> On 10/28/2015 1:01 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
>>> You could try resetting the BIOS options to the default/optimal values (there should be an option in the BIOS to do this). Make note of current settings first so you can change any back to what they should be.
>>>
>>> Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard, for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
>>>
>>> If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it forgets everything.
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
find the problem key(s) on the keyboard?
I can get into Windows in a round-about way.
Mary
On 10/28/2015 5:53 PM, MJNelson wrote:
> Earlier it is possible one key WAS sticking. I would get noise
> when I attempted to exit the bios.
>
> The 3 & 4 and the e & r keys are lower than the others.
>
> It is going back into the bios again.
>
> Can I just work around this since I can get Windows to boot?
>
> I do have a new keyboard but this computer got messed up replacing the
> one on it so am reluctant to have it done.
> Thanks
> Mary
>
> On 10/28/2015 5:34 PM, MJNelson wrote:
>> I played with hitting a few key on the keyboard.Just going down the row
>> The next time I booted, it went to the Windows login-in screen.
>>
>> Some of the number keys seem to stick up too little so will shut down
>> and do some more key hitting!!!
>>
>> Thanks for the suggestion of the keyboard.
>> Mary
>>
>> On 10/28/2015 1:01 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
>>> You could try resetting the BIOS options to the default/optimal values (there should be an option in the BIOS to do this). Make note of current settings first so you can change any back to what they should be.
>>>
>>> Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard, for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
>>>
>>> If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it forgets everything.
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
Re: BIOS issues?
On Thu, 29 Oct 2015 19:09:19 PDT, just as I was about to take a herb,
MJNelson disturbed my reverie and wrote:
>Is it possible to just work-around the booting problem since I cannot
>find the problem key(s) on the keyboard?
I have seem some, but not many BIOSs, where one can change the
behaviour if the keyboard is faulty. Other than that, I am stumped.
--
Cheers,
DrT
"If you want to find out what is wrong
with democracy, spend five minutes with
the average voter." - Winston Churchill
MJNelson disturbed my reverie and wrote:
>Is it possible to just work-around the booting problem since I cannot
>find the problem key(s) on the keyboard?
I have seem some, but not many BIOSs, where one can change the
behaviour if the keyboard is faulty. Other than that, I am stumped.
--
Cheers,
DrT
"If you want to find out what is wrong
with democracy, spend five minutes with
the average voter." - Winston Churchill
-
- Posts: 3738
- Joined: Thu May 05, 2011 10:37 pm
Re: BIOS issues?
I'd replace it. changing a keyboard shouldn't cause a problem unless you
have a problem with the physical hardware where it plugs in.
"MJNelson" wrote in message news:10514@public.tech.misc...
Is it possible to just work-around the booting problem since I cannot
find the problem key(s) on the keyboard?
I can get into Windows in a round-about way.
Mary
On 10/28/2015 5:53 PM, MJNelson wrote:
> Earlier it is possible one key WAS sticking. I would get noise
> when I attempted to exit the bios.
>
> The 3 & 4 and the e & r keys are lower than the others.
>
> It is going back into the bios again.
>
> Can I just work around this since I can get Windows to boot?
>
> I do have a new keyboard but this computer got messed up replacing the
> one on it so am reluctant to have it done.
> Thanks
> Mary
>
> On 10/28/2015 5:34 PM, MJNelson wrote:
>> I played with hitting a few key on the keyboard.Just going down the row
>> The next time I booted, it went to the Windows login-in screen.
>>
>> Some of the number keys seem to stick up too little so will shut down
>> and do some more key hitting!!!
>>
>> Thanks for the suggestion of the keyboard.
>> Mary
>>
>> On 10/28/2015 1:01 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
>>> You could try resetting the BIOS options to the default/optimal values
>>> (there should be an option in the BIOS to do this). Make note of current
>>> settings first so you can change any back to what they should be.
>>>
>>> Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard,
>>> for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or
>>> error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
>>>
>>> If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it
>>> forgets everything.
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
have a problem with the physical hardware where it plugs in.
"MJNelson" wrote in message news:10514@public.tech.misc...
Is it possible to just work-around the booting problem since I cannot
find the problem key(s) on the keyboard?
I can get into Windows in a round-about way.
Mary
On 10/28/2015 5:53 PM, MJNelson wrote:
> Earlier it is possible one key WAS sticking. I would get noise
> when I attempted to exit the bios.
>
> The 3 & 4 and the e & r keys are lower than the others.
>
> It is going back into the bios again.
>
> Can I just work around this since I can get Windows to boot?
>
> I do have a new keyboard but this computer got messed up replacing the
> one on it so am reluctant to have it done.
> Thanks
> Mary
>
> On 10/28/2015 5:34 PM, MJNelson wrote:
>> I played with hitting a few key on the keyboard.Just going down the row
>> The next time I booted, it went to the Windows login-in screen.
>>
>> Some of the number keys seem to stick up too little so will shut down
>> and do some more key hitting!!!
>>
>> Thanks for the suggestion of the keyboard.
>> Mary
>>
>> On 10/28/2015 1:01 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
>>> You could try resetting the BIOS options to the default/optimal values
>>> (there should be an option in the BIOS to do this). Make note of current
>>> settings first so you can change any back to what they should be.
>>>
>>> Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard,
>>> for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or
>>> error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
>>>
>>> If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it
>>> forgets everything.
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
-
- Posts: 785
- Joined: Fri Aug 12, 2011 1:24 am
Re: BIOS issues?
When they "replaced" the keyboard on this computer, it wound up not even
booting. I sent it to Acer in Texas for repair.
Almost the whole computer insides need to be removed to get the keyboard
out unless one has the knack of removing it from the top. I saw a video
of someone doing that on this model. It is not as easy as it looks.
Mary
On 10/30/2015 10:53 AM, TeraByte Support wrote:
> I'd replace it. changing a keyboard shouldn't cause a problem unless you
> have a problem with the physical hardware where it plugs in.
>
> "MJNelson" wrote in message news:10514@public.tech.misc...
>
> Is it possible to just work-around the booting problem since I cannot
> find the problem key(s) on the keyboard?
>
> I can get into Windows in a round-about way.
> Mary
>
> On 10/28/2015 5:53 PM, MJNelson wrote:
>> Earlier it is possible one key WAS sticking. I would get noise
>> when I attempted to exit the bios.
>>
>> The 3 & 4 and the e & r keys are lower than the others.
>>
>> It is going back into the bios again.
>>
>> Can I just work around this since I can get Windows to boot?
>>
>> I do have a new keyboard but this computer got messed up replacing the
>> one on it so am reluctant to have it done.
>> Thanks
>> Mary
>>
>> On 10/28/2015 5:34 PM, MJNelson wrote:
>>> I played with hitting a few key on the keyboard.Just going down the row
>>> The next time I booted, it went to the Windows login-in screen.
>>>
>>> Some of the number keys seem to stick up too little so will shut down
>>> and do some more key hitting!!!
>>>
>>> Thanks for the suggestion of the keyboard.
>>> Mary
>>>
>>> On 10/28/2015 1:01 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
>>>> You could try resetting the BIOS options to the default/optimal values
>>>> (there should be an option in the BIOS to do this). Make note of current
>>>> settings first so you can change any back to what they should be.
>>>>
>>>> Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard,
>>>> for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or
>>>> error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
>>>>
>>>> If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it
>>>> forgets everything.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
booting. I sent it to Acer in Texas for repair.
Almost the whole computer insides need to be removed to get the keyboard
out unless one has the knack of removing it from the top. I saw a video
of someone doing that on this model. It is not as easy as it looks.
Mary
On 10/30/2015 10:53 AM, TeraByte Support wrote:
> I'd replace it. changing a keyboard shouldn't cause a problem unless you
> have a problem with the physical hardware where it plugs in.
>
> "MJNelson" wrote in message news:10514@public.tech.misc...
>
> Is it possible to just work-around the booting problem since I cannot
> find the problem key(s) on the keyboard?
>
> I can get into Windows in a round-about way.
> Mary
>
> On 10/28/2015 5:53 PM, MJNelson wrote:
>> Earlier it is possible one key WAS sticking. I would get noise
>> when I attempted to exit the bios.
>>
>> The 3 & 4 and the e & r keys are lower than the others.
>>
>> It is going back into the bios again.
>>
>> Can I just work around this since I can get Windows to boot?
>>
>> I do have a new keyboard but this computer got messed up replacing the
>> one on it so am reluctant to have it done.
>> Thanks
>> Mary
>>
>> On 10/28/2015 5:34 PM, MJNelson wrote:
>>> I played with hitting a few key on the keyboard.Just going down the row
>>> The next time I booted, it went to the Windows login-in screen.
>>>
>>> Some of the number keys seem to stick up too little so will shut down
>>> and do some more key hitting!!!
>>>
>>> Thanks for the suggestion of the keyboard.
>>> Mary
>>>
>>> On 10/28/2015 1:01 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
>>>> You could try resetting the BIOS options to the default/optimal values
>>>> (there should be an option in the BIOS to do this). Make note of current
>>>> settings first so you can change any back to what they should be.
>>>>
>>>> Some computers will boot to the BIOS if they detect errors (keyboard,
>>>> for example). Check for stuck keys. Check the BIOS for any status or
>>>> error messages. Some log errors so you can review them.
>>>>
>>>> If the board battery is dead that can also cause BIOS boots since it
>>>> forgets everything.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
-
- Posts: 1682
- Joined: Fri Aug 12, 2011 12:51 am
Re: BIOS issues?
Does the BIOS have an option to ignore errors on boot-up?
-
- Posts: 785
- Joined: Fri Aug 12, 2011 1:24 am
Re: BIOS issues?
Not sure. My guess is, no. Most laptops have limited options.
On 10/30/2015 12:17 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
> Does the BIOS have an option to ignore errors on boot-up?
>
>
On 10/30/2015 12:17 PM, TeraByte Support (PP) wrote:
> Does the BIOS have an option to ignore errors on boot-up?
>
>