36,346 yen later… (major tin foil hat warning)

I have a new motherboard, CPU and C: drive. The closest store that does repairs wanted to charge 8000 yen and spend a week to figure out what broke. It goes without saying, but since my current mobo and CPU weren’t bought within the two weeks, they’re both obsolete. So not matter what part is fried, I’m going to have to replace the whole shebang.

So I saved myself 8000 yen and spent a little extra to buy a motherboard that can take a Celeron D today and a Core Duo later. I’m spending this beautiful summer Sunday to reinstall Windows and all my software.

Can I end with a little bit of geek bitching? This newfangled mobo only has one IDE bus. Like we’re all supposed to throw away all our IDE drives and replace them with SATA. And no onboard firewire either. Both problems can be resolved by buying PCI boards, but most new mobos only have 3 PCI slots. Is it just me or were older motherboards more user friendly?

In the end, none of the cheap and easy solutions worked. I tried:

  • clearing the CMOS
  • replacing the mobo’s battery
  • detaching everything not needed to boot into bios

I wish I knew if the old mobo is OK. Someday I’d like to put together a PVR for the living room.

Rich Pav

Richard has been living in Japan since 1990 with his wife and two teenage sons, Tony and Andy.

13 thoughts to “36,346 yen later… (major tin foil hat warning)”

  1. Ouch, when stuff breaks on pc’s it can take most of the main componants out at once. 1 ide is crazy, although I have 2 sata drives.
    Have you lost all your data on the hd that broke?

      1. You’re sick. lol That’s a lot of usb ports. I was overwhelmed when I saw that I had 8 on my new pc…

  2. take your time with it, don’t feel obligated. its cool enough that you are puting something out every now and then!

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