Asus COP

by Dan Matthews 21. November 2007 08:46

I thought I'd just blog a little interesting thing I came across whilst fitting a new CPU to my PC yesterday. I've got an Asus motherboard and wanted to swap my Socket-A Sempron for an Athlon XP (yes, old skool I know). When I fitted the new CPU and hit the power switch, the system fired up for 3 seconds and then shut down. Thinking that maybe I'd got a fried chip - it was 2nd hand after all - I swapped the old one back in. Same thing. Started, then halted.

Worried that I'd fried the motherboard somehow, I did the whole techie thing... stripped down to a bare board and tried another PSU. Same thing. Wouldn't boot. I was about to sling the board in the bin and go buy another when I had a thought. Asus have something called CPU Overheating Protection (COP) on many of their boards, including this one. I'd been testing with the heatsink+fan connected to the motherboard but not fitted on the CPU itself. I fitted them, and hey presto it all worked fine :)

Turns out that the Asus COP somehow detects the presence of the heatsink fitted on top of the CPU. I'm not sure how - maybe pressure? Maybe some kind of induction test inside the CPU core or Motherboard? If anyone can tell me I'd appreciate it - I'm curious.

So I should really have a bit more faith in Asus motherboards, and just be impressed at the clever little things that stop me doing stupid stuff :)

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Comments

11/22/2007 9:41:34 AM #

It works it out as the heatsink has to be plugged into the motherboard. The MB detects the current running between the pins, and therefore assumes the heatsink is plugged in.

Dominic |

11/23/2007 9:31:52 AM #

"had a thought"?

Matt |

11/27/2007 2:28:31 PM #

Nice thought Dom - but if you read my post then you'll see that I did have the heatsink fitted to the motherboard and the fan was spinning up... the problem was solved merely by fitting the heatsink ONTO the CPU.

Bizarre but true - they actually detect the presence of the heatsink somehow!

Dan Matthews |

5/30/2008 7:44:55 PM #

Presumably the CPU got too hot without the heatsink, so the COP kicked in and shut the PC down.  When the heatsink was put in place the heating issue was removed and the machine started normally.  The COP doesn't know whether the heatsink is attached or not, but it does know if the CPU is too hot (for whatever reason)...

Mark |

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