The 7000 AlCu should be plenty of cooling for your Athlon XP, assuming you
are running it at the default voltage. It looks like your motherboard
should support this heatsink, as well, though you might want to double check
that there isn't anything around the area of the CPU that might be
preventing the heatsink from sitting on the processor in a level manner.
This is a very big heatsink, so it is easy for some component to be in the
way and keep the heatsink from sitting all the way down, flat, on the CPU.
You may also want to double check that you installed the heatsink properly.
Did you plug the fan into the CPU fan header? Assuming that you mounted the
heatsink so that it is getting good contact with the CPU, the problem may be
with the CPU fan monitor, as the excerpt from the instructions that you
quoted above suggested. Turn the fans speed up to full, at least until you
can get into the BIOS to change the alarm settings. If this still doesn't
work, you could try another 3-wire fan (your old heatsink fan, for example)
in the CPU header and plug the heatsink fan into a different fan header.
Again, this would be until you can get into the BIOS to make some changes.
John Sproule
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ivy Son" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, January 19, 2006 8:05 PM
Subject: [PCBUILD] monitor doesn't power on and LOUD beeping sound
> My specs:
>
>
> ***CPU: AMD Athlon(TM) XP 3000+
> ***MB: Asus A7V600-X VIA KT600 RET
> ***PSU: Raidmax KY-520ATX ATX12V 420W
>
> 2.10GHz, 1.00GB of RAM
> SONY DVD RW DRU-800A
> case Raidmax ATX-868wsp
> GeForce FX5200 128M ddr
> HD: 160GB Maxtor 6Y160P0 72R 8MB%
>
>
> I recently bought and installed the Zalman cnps7000-alcu heatsink, and
> when I
> turn on the comp, a loud beeping sound comes on and the monitor doesn't
> power on.
>
>
> I noticed On the instruction manual that it says:
> "When booting the comp, it may automatically power down after an alarm
> sound by a
> system monitoring program to indicate that the CPU fan is rotating slowly.
> if this
> happens, turn the speed control knob fully clockwise to increase the fan
> speed. then
> set 'CPU Fan Detected' to 'Disabled' in the BIOS settings, or set the
> slowest
> rotational speed of the CPU fan in the system monitoring program to less
> than or
> equal to 1,300rpm.
> Note) Some motherboards do not boot if the rotational speed of the CPU fan
> is below
> a certain rpm. If the BIOS settings are updated, Silent Mode can be used."
>
>
> Are my voltages too high for the heatsink? If so, what extremely quiet
> heatsink
> do you recommend that is compatible with my computer? If no, what can
> possibly be
> causing this sound and monitor problem?
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