My system clock seems to run slow when my machine is powered down. It is fine as long as it's turned on. The machine is only a couple of years old and I don't think it's the battery because it only loses a couple of hours even when powered off for a few days. Any clue?
Just because your system is only a couple of years old does not mean the Manufacturer got a fresh off the shelf battery when they put it together. Their last shipment of batteries could have come by way of slow boat from China.<br>
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Change the battery and see what happens.<br>
clock chip( dallas claims +-1min/month). The board is a drop in 8bit ISA slotcard with configurable port addresses (C800 to DC00)that bypasses the cmos clock for y2k probs but actually replaces the CMOS clock. You can also try buying the chip itself from Dallas or dist. and soldering it in to the motherboard yourself
If changing the battery doesn't help, you could try updating the system clock from the internet. That way your clock will get corrected even if it goes slow.<br><br>Socketwatch is a utility that watches for connection to the internet, then polls time servers and updates the clock. It is available from <A HREF="
If it is a workstation rather than a server (and if it is a server why are you powering it down?) the use a log in script including the net time command.<br><br>Lazy, but it works!
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