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I'm reopening a new thread with my problem here. Please help :) I recently bought a GA-EX58-EXTREME mobo. I have problems with the onboard NICs. After a cold start, they are both detected correctly by the OS (either Linux or Windows Vista). As long as the computer stays on (even for days), the network cards function properly. However, after a restart things start to get random: sometimes only one NIC is recognized by the system and sometimes neither of them. This problem is NOT OS-related: when the problem occurs, the are not recognized by any OS (Linux, Windows Vista) or by the BIOS. To be more specific, here is what I do to test: -reboot in Windows, no LAN detected -power off and wait for a couple of minutes -boot Windows, LANs are detected correctly -reboot in Linux, no LAN detected -power off and wait for a couple of minutes -boot Linux, LANs are detected correctly -reboot and enter in BIOS settings -use the Virtual Cable test feature for both NICs- application does NOT work (so the NICs are not detected even by BIOS) -power off and wait for a couple of minutes -enter BIOS settings again- Virtual Cable successfully detects cable signal for both NICs I tried different versions of BIOS- F4 and F5x and all have the same problem. I have 5 SATA HDDs and one SATA DVD, powered by a Corsair 750W power supply. My APC UPS application reports a load of less than 200W constantly, so this cannot be the cause of the issue. Also, the motherboard is not overclocked in any way. What would your advice be for further troubleshooting this? Could this be a BIOS bug or a hardware problem? Thanks! |
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This has been seen before. Take a look at this thread: EX58-UD5 Problem
Mine is fixed - either by updating bios and/or using different drivers. I know - it doesn't seem like it could be drivers. My theory is that the drivers do something illegal to the hardware leaving the lans locked up. Anyway, use the latest bios and, for Windows, don't let Windows install the lan drivers dated October. Download them from Realtek. |
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Hi,
Could you please tell me what exact version of the BIOS you have? I see the latest is F6b, but the thread was opened a while ago... Otherwise, thanks for the advice, I'll try this over the weekend. Ovidiu |
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I remember for sure that F5d worked well for me. I've changed to F6a prior to trying my drives in AHCI mode (figuring that they must have fixed that by now) and am having no problems. But be sure to check that you're not using the Realtek drivers dated 10/07. I've told Windows to hide the update so it doesn't keep offering it to me.
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F6b is the latest Beta. You can always get the Latest Beta BIOS for your board here >>
Gigabyte Latest BIOS
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Hi. I had the same problem with network on ga-x58-ds4.
This happened only in windows and after didnt worked on linux(mandriva 2009) too ,only disconnect from power helped. I have flashed bios F5 from gigabyte, installed drivers from october 2008, in windows entered to configuration of lan adapter and disabeled power saver, green lan , then the problem gone. If i dont disable power saver and green lan ,problem continues on F5 bios. Strange that power saver locks lan and only power off helps. Hope next bios will fix this problem i see F6b is available, but i want only final version. p.s sorry for my english :) Last edited by sash_kur; 03-05-2009 at 05:52 PM. |
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No luck for me.
I tried with F5 official release and also with the latest beta- F6d. I updated RTL drivers both in Windows and in Linux (drivers dated 02/26/09 for Vista and 02/25/09 for Linux). The only difference I imagine between my setup and those who worked for other people is the number of drives used. I use 5 HDDs and 1 DVD drive- all on the Intel SATA controller. I did notice some stability improvement when I ran the system with only one HDD and the DVD drive (LAN interfaces went undetected after more reboots). I could be subjective though... Of all X58 motherboards manufacturers that use on-board RTL chipsets, only Gigabyte seem to have this issue...so I don't think it's driver-related after all. I think it's a hardware or a BIOS firmware problem...and since no BIOS firmware managed to fix this, I fear it's actually the former to be blamed. |
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