These are difficult to find but they do pop up on EBay occasionally. Search for "socket 775 cover" or "socket 775 protector" in "Computing".
Check the connections from the usb slot to your motherboard, could be a faulty port or a faulty motherboard connection
sending unit, fuse, socket, wiring or a bad ground If the gage is pegged at full check for wiring and also for corrosion at the socket where the body harness connects with the fuel tank wiring. The fuel sending unit shows high resistance when the tank gage reads full. That means a break in the wiring or an 'open' sending unit (infinite resistance) will likewise, show full. The sending unit replacement means draining and dropping the tank. Before you assume a faulty sending unit (you have already unplugged the harness to check for corrosion) check the resistance of the sending unit. A Chilton's or Haynes manual will give you the readings at full and empty and will tell you which pins to put the meter across.
You should not bother to check any power supply in the motherboard. You need to take the motherboard to service centre if faulty.
Faulty socket wiring problem Faulty flasher faulty switch
The expansion card
LGA115X is a series of CPU sockets for the Core i3, i5, and i7 family of desktop CPUs. The purpose of a CPU socket is to properly seat the CPU in place on the system mainboard (motherboard) and allows the CPU to interface with the rest of the computer parts. It also makes it easier for the user and/or the computer company (OEM, original equipment manufacturer) to swap out any faulty CPUs or to allow its removal (while the computer's powered off) to conduct maintenance.
No that's impossible.
The sending unit in the tank is probably at fault. Replacement of the sending unit would be necessary to correct it.
Faulty sending unit.
First cause is possibly a hardware change. Reboot at least once to see if the message clears. The most likely cause is the CMOS battery getting weak or has lost its power. This can be changed according to your motherboard's manual. Other much less likely causes I've seen reported are new hardware being incompatible or faulty, or a motherboard faulty. These can cause you to panic but are not the likely cause, but should not be ruled out. Try the battery replacement first.
There are 4 of them on the car, so you need to know which one is faulty. To replace them is the same for all. Disconnect the connector to the faulty o2 sensor and using a o2 sensor socket or a wrench that will fit unscrew the sensor. Install the replacement sensor and reconnect the wire.
Burned out bulb Faulty socket and/or wiring/ ground Faulty turn signal flasher Faulty turn signal Switch