jonathonoss
MIS
I have an old IBM Thinkpad 770. It was dropped once several months ago, which smashed up the corner with the power button. Apart from having to start it with a long-nose pliers (because the power button broke off), I have had no trouble with it, until now.
The laptop sat for several weeks without a power connection, and yesterday when I plugged it in to start it, I got errors 173 and 163 in that order. 173 = "Bad CMOS/NVRAM checksum", and 163 = "CMOS error; Clock is not updating". It then promtps me to set the clock and then to cold boot the machine. However, I get the same errors on bootup (173, 163) -- no change. When it prompts me to set the clock, I notice that it kept the same time that I entered before the boot! Maybe the CMOS battery is good?!?
So then I tried entering into BIOS setup, as I read that saving your CMOS settings can fix CMOS checksum errors; however, it doesn't let me enter the BIOS setup! After several cold boots and setting of the clock (although each time it keeps the time from the prior boot, so the battery must be working), I decided to take out the CMOS battery and let it sit for about 15-30 minutes.
When I put the battery back in, I got errors 161 and 163. Error 161 = "CMOS configuration lost (battery has died)", Error 163 = "CMOS error; Clock is not updating". This time, the clock had reset, so I set it and did a cold boot. Then it was error free and it booted the O/S. I warm booted the machine a few times and I received no errors.
This morning I started the machine and now I have the same errors: 173 and 163. Removing the battery for extended periods does not work.
Is it the CMOS chip that's the problem?, if so can the CMOS chip be replaced? It doesn't seem to be the battery problem because it keeps time, right? Does the CMOS ever rely on AC power, or does it only rely on the battery no matter if the laptop is plugged in or not? Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Jon
The laptop sat for several weeks without a power connection, and yesterday when I plugged it in to start it, I got errors 173 and 163 in that order. 173 = "Bad CMOS/NVRAM checksum", and 163 = "CMOS error; Clock is not updating". It then promtps me to set the clock and then to cold boot the machine. However, I get the same errors on bootup (173, 163) -- no change. When it prompts me to set the clock, I notice that it kept the same time that I entered before the boot! Maybe the CMOS battery is good?!?
So then I tried entering into BIOS setup, as I read that saving your CMOS settings can fix CMOS checksum errors; however, it doesn't let me enter the BIOS setup! After several cold boots and setting of the clock (although each time it keeps the time from the prior boot, so the battery must be working), I decided to take out the CMOS battery and let it sit for about 15-30 minutes.
When I put the battery back in, I got errors 161 and 163. Error 161 = "CMOS configuration lost (battery has died)", Error 163 = "CMOS error; Clock is not updating". This time, the clock had reset, so I set it and did a cold boot. Then it was error free and it booted the O/S. I warm booted the machine a few times and I received no errors.
This morning I started the machine and now I have the same errors: 173 and 163. Removing the battery for extended periods does not work.
Is it the CMOS chip that's the problem?, if so can the CMOS chip be replaced? It doesn't seem to be the battery problem because it keeps time, right? Does the CMOS ever rely on AC power, or does it only rely on the battery no matter if the laptop is plugged in or not? Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Jon