Solved: Windows 7 Can’t Resume from Standby
There are a lot of reasons (apparently) that Windows 7 might not resume from standby. Here is a fix to try but probably only if you are desperate and have these exact symptoms.
My customer brought in a Lenovo X200 laptop, a very nice laptop indeed, that would not boot. In fact after turning on the computer, the dash lights would like but the display would not even flicker, it was completely dead. If it weren’t for the fact that the computer wasn’t booting (and the customer insisted it had not been immersed in water) I would have thought the display had gone bad. However, I knew it wasn’t just a display problem because if it had been a) the machine would have continued to boot and b) we would have been able to see something by connecting an external monitor.
Interestingly, if I removed all the RAM, the machine would provide the beep codes associated with, “Hey stupid, you’ve removed all the RAM”. Replacing one stick at a time did not fix the problem, replace the HDD did not fix the problem. The machine does not have an internal CD, but if it did, replacing it would not have helped.
So, here is a summary of the symptoms:
- Black screen, no flicker or change in state
- Dash lights light but HDD light does not show sustained activity
- Bluetooth light illuminates and stays lit
- No POST
- No BIOS screen
- No beep codes (unless all RAM is removed)
- Same result with battery in and out
This looked like a dead system board and that’s what the repair manual indicated as well. But as it turns out, it was just a hosed CMOS. On this particular machine, the only way to reset the CMOS (that I could find) was to partly disassemble the computer, unplug the CMOS battery then put everything back together. Many machines have a simpler method that can be done using the power button (that did not work on this machine) or some other key combination. If you have a different machine, Google for “CMOS reset” and the model of your computer and you should find a way to do this.
