F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Diagnose BIOS issues with the old Supermicro X8SAX

Diagnose BIOS issues with the old Supermicro X8SAX

Diagnose BIOS issues with the old Supermicro X8SAX

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Scra3mITout
Member
222
07-24-2016, 10:03 AM
#1
The office equipment includes an outdated flight simulator they assigned me to maintain. After a graphical glitch, the screen became unresponsive until I restarted it. I swapped out the CMOS battery and tried booting via BIOS using a PS/2 keyboard, but the issue persists. It works with F11/F12 for changing boot options. Someone knows about typical problems or BIOS quirks on this kind of system. Updated September 23, 2025 by T271
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Scra3mITout
07-24-2016, 10:03 AM #1

The office equipment includes an outdated flight simulator they assigned me to maintain. After a graphical glitch, the screen became unresponsive until I restarted it. I swapped out the CMOS battery and tried booting via BIOS using a PS/2 keyboard, but the issue persists. It works with F11/F12 for changing boot options. Someone knows about typical problems or BIOS quirks on this kind of system. Updated September 23, 2025 by T271

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BenTGreat
Senior Member
437
07-24-2016, 06:55 PM
#2
Confirm if "Delete" is the correct button to press for the bios on this device.
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BenTGreat
07-24-2016, 06:55 PM #2

Confirm if "Delete" is the correct button to press for the bios on this device.

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FureaMC
Senior Member
564
07-24-2016, 08:05 PM
#3
I think I'm not understanding correctly. The guide mentions using 'delete' often, but sometimes F1 or F2 are better. This particular situation happened once, and F1 helped me out.
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FureaMC
07-24-2016, 08:05 PM #3

I think I'm not understanding correctly. The guide mentions using 'delete' often, but sometimes F1 or F2 are better. This particular situation happened once, and F1 helped me out.

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LewisS_1999
Member
100
08-01-2016, 03:33 AM
#4
It's normal to feel this way; everyone experiences it.
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LewisS_1999
08-01-2016, 03:33 AM #4

It's normal to feel this way; everyone experiences it.