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Weird PC behavior

Weird PC behavior

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BritneyBitxh
Member
62
08-17-2016, 12:15 PM
#1
Hello, I noticed two issues with your PC. 1) When turning it on, it sometimes jumps straight into BIOS, which is inconvenient. After exiting BIOS, a beep plays and then it switches to Windows. Is this typical? 2) During sleep mode, the PC fails to power on, requiring you to manually turn it on with the power button. Every time you open a program or tab, it restarts. How can I resolve these problems?
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BritneyBitxh
08-17-2016, 12:15 PM #1

Hello, I noticed two issues with your PC. 1) When turning it on, it sometimes jumps straight into BIOS, which is inconvenient. After exiting BIOS, a beep plays and then it switches to Windows. Is this typical? 2) During sleep mode, the PC fails to power on, requiring you to manually turn it on with the power button. Every time you open a program or tab, it restarts. How can I resolve these problems?

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_Ninguem_
Member
140
08-24-2016, 09:16 AM
#2
Adjust your PC's settings to prevent it from shutting down automatically. Check if the BIOS displays any warnings or alerts during startup.
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_Ninguem_
08-24-2016, 09:16 AM #2

Adjust your PC's settings to prevent it from shutting down automatically. Check if the BIOS displays any warnings or alerts during startup.

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goodguychedder
Junior Member
10
08-24-2016, 03:16 PM
#3
I understand you can prevent the PC from sleeping, but you're curious about why this is happening. There are no errors or alerts—just the system moves straight to the BIOS, then a beep occurs before loading Windows.
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goodguychedder
08-24-2016, 03:16 PM #3

I understand you can prevent the PC from sleeping, but you're curious about why this is happening. There are no errors or alerts—just the system moves straight to the BIOS, then a beep occurs before loading Windows.

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skyhawk123
Junior Member
36
09-03-2016, 03:46 AM
#4
What Windows are you using? 11 or 10? Can you share your PC specs?
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skyhawk123
09-03-2016, 03:46 AM #4

What Windows are you using? 11 or 10? Can you share your PC specs?

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packerfarr
Member
119
09-03-2016, 04:54 AM
#5
System specifications for Windows 10 include an I7 8700 processor, RX 570 GPU, 16 GB RAM, 128 GB SSD, and a 1 TB HDD.
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packerfarr
09-03-2016, 04:54 AM #5

System specifications for Windows 10 include an I7 8700 processor, RX 570 GPU, 16 GB RAM, 128 GB SSD, and a 1 TB HDD.

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AthenasLight
Posting Freak
781
09-03-2016, 10:17 AM
#6
Have you used the Windows Startup Repair utility? What is the order of your boot devices in the BIOS? Are there any external drives or USB sticks connected during startup? The boot device priority can often be changed to USB or external storage, which may lead the system to boot into BIOS because those devices don’t have an operating system.
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AthenasLight
09-03-2016, 10:17 AM #6

Have you used the Windows Startup Repair utility? What is the order of your boot devices in the BIOS? Are there any external drives or USB sticks connected during startup? The boot device priority can often be changed to USB or external storage, which may lead the system to boot into BIOS because those devices don’t have an operating system.

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XxPIZZxX
Member
56
09-03-2016, 11:05 AM
#7
I didn't attempt it. The boot priority is set for my SSD, and I've downloaded Windows there. There are no external drives or USB sticks connected.
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XxPIZZxX
09-03-2016, 11:05 AM #7

I didn't attempt it. The boot priority is set for my SSD, and I've downloaded Windows there. There are no external drives or USB sticks connected.

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CavalrysHere
Member
59
09-07-2016, 05:42 PM
#8
You might attempt to remove the CMOS battery from your MOBO for a few seconds to observe whether resetting the BIOS assists (or erasing CMOS using the button on your motherboard if available). Updating the BIOS is another option, but review the BIOS documentation to ensure it won’t render your CPU or RAM obsolete.
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CavalrysHere
09-07-2016, 05:42 PM #8

You might attempt to remove the CMOS battery from your MOBO for a few seconds to observe whether resetting the BIOS assists (or erasing CMOS using the button on your motherboard if available). Updating the BIOS is another option, but review the BIOS documentation to ensure it won’t render your CPU or RAM obsolete.