I think I may have a more sinister issue.
When I had my Thunderbird/700 in my machine, I was running my memory
bus at 425MHz. One day while changing my latency settings from
2:3:3:8 to 2:3:2:6 (I had them lowered due to the O/C), the system
failed to boot.
Ever since, I have had to run my memory at 2:3:3:8 with a 380MHz
memory bus, even now with my XP/2800. If I run only one stick of
memory, I can push 385MHz, but nothing more. Otherwise, the system
just boots with "AF" code.
On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 11:28:01 -0400, "DDDD" <someone DeleteThis @some.one> wrote:
>I go along with those who say a memory problem. I had the 'AF' code on mine
>and I re-seated the memory and it went away. I was "positive" that I had
>properly seated the memory the first time, but being "positive" didn't
>really mean anything. It was not seated right and this may be your problem.
>
>DDDD
>
>"Dinjiin" <dev.null@localhost> wrote in message
>news:er9km0dr6e7rvtck9khgf66nlfl72fir5g@4ax.com...
>>I have the same problem.
>>
>> I think it may be a memory issue, since when I underclock my memory,
>> the issue goes away. I've just emailed ABit to ask.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Fri, 30 Jul 2004 22:41:20 -0500, Vmax <anyone DeleteThis @anywhere.com> wrote:
>>
>>>I'm unable to get my newly installed AN7 board to POST.
>>>
>>>The visible hex post code readout when the failure occurs is "AF",
>>>which not listed in the in the appendix of the owners manual. Does
>>>anyone know what this means ?
>>>
>>>I'm using an Enermax 350W power supply. Is this insufficient to to
>>>run an AN7 ?
>>>
>>>The audible POST code is a series of long beeps. I've checked the
>>>video card (Radeon 9200) and memory ( 2 sticks of 512M Crucial DDR400)
>>>in another computer, and they're OK.
>>>
>>>Thanks.
>>>
>>
>>
><!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
>> Stay informed about: AN7 - POST code AF ?