Re: Great Mystery Compaq Presario 1200XL Laptop



On Thu, 05 Mar 2009 11:47:44 -0800, David Nebenzahl
<nobody@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On 3/5/2009 5:46 AM PeterD spake thus:

On Wed, 04 Mar 2009 17:09:10 -0800, David Nebenzahl
<nobody@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On 3/4/2009 4:46 AM Ken spake thus:

Brad wrote:

I have a Compaq Presario 1200XL laptop computer that one day, would
not power up. I tried another power supply, replaced a dead
RTC/cmos battery, etc. I removed the RTC battery, main battery, and
put it away. A month later, I decided to try it again. It powered
up! Everything seemed just fine, but it only lasted for a couple
days before it happened again. Again, I put it away. A month or so
later, it powered up and again everything seemed just fine. I
downloaded ROM Paq SP15611 and I "flashed" the bios. About a day
and 1/2 later, the laptop "died". Now it won't boot up. Again after
a long rest period, it came back to "life", but for how long? Note:
It won't power up after a week's "rest", but it will power up after
a longer rest such as a month!

If it were my computer the first thing I would do is clean the
contacts of the RAM. It sounds a lot like a bad connection and the
RAM is essential to it booting to even a bios screen for most
computers.

True, but it's hard to see how that would explain the bizarre behavior
the O.P. reported (what, do the memory chips magically unseat
themselves, then reseat themselves in the interval?).

Easy to explain: the notebook has a (large) capacitor that is across
the backup battery so that when that battery is replaced, the settings
are not lost. He removes the backup battery, then in the (couple of
weeks) time the capacitor finally discharges and the configuration
settings are lost, and the computer can reboot.

I don't get it; how would the settings not being lost lead to the
computer not being bootable? This would seem to defeat the whole purpose
of nonvolatile configuration settings, unless I'm missing something
obvious in your reply.

Corrupted hard drive data... I've seen it happen where it would only
boot if the computer NVRAM data was set to factory specs (telling the
BIOS to find out what the drive is). Very rare... But then again, the
OP's problem seems a bit unusual, too! <g>
.



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