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Sandy Bridge shut down and wont boot http://www.wsgf.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=22795 |
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Author: | packerfan [ 28 Sep 2011, 07:22 ] |
Post subject: | Sandy Bridge shut down and wont boot |
I was wondering if any of you could provide some insight as to why my sandybridge built shut down suddenly and wont boot. I was about to hit shutdown after updating to the latest beta nvidia drivers in an attempt to get something to work, before I can click the button the power suddenly cuts out. Now the machine wont boot up anymore. The powersupply seems good as I can unplug the 8 pin cpu connector and the rest of the rig starts up and the cpu error LED lights up, when it is all plugged in there is a tiny flash of the cpu fan LEDs then it turns off and I have to unplug in order to get it to start again. I tried overclocking but havent in a few months and I have been running at stock clocks. Any ideas? Thanks Packerfan |
Author: | Skid [ 28 Sep 2011, 10:04 ] |
Post subject: | Only thing I can suggest is |
Only thing I can suggest is make sure the heat sink is seated correctly, if its not, that could cause your issue. Otherwise, if your system doesn't even give a flicker of life when your press the power button with the 8 pin connector in, its possible one of the motherboard caps has fried. |
Author: | QuackingPlums [ 28 Sep 2011, 13:15 ] |
Post subject: | What board do you have? ASUS |
What board do you have? ASUS boards have a "MemOK" switch that sometimes needs pressing to (supposedly) resolve a memory timing issue that prevents booting. I don't know if other boards have anything similar. I've had something similar happen once after a soft reset and nothing would work until I hit that switch. As far as I can tell the memory timing issues haven't changed from the settings prior to the glitch (and I'm anal enough to have taken photos of the BIOS/UEFI screens) but it's been happy ever since. |
Author: | packerfan [ 28 Sep 2011, 15:43 ] |
Post subject: | To add a little moreWhen I |
To add a little more When I press the mem ok button it does nothing If I unplug it for a bit and plug it back in and press the power button the cpu fan twitches for a split second then nothing If I unplug the 8 pin cpu connector it seemingly comes to life minus the fan not being connected so I am not sure if that is a motherboard or cpu issue. The case hasn't been moved in over a month and has had no issues so I don't think it is a heatsink seating issue. I may try to bring the case over to my sisters place and try her 8 pin cpu connector from her power supply and see how it behaves. |
Author: | packerfan [ 28 Sep 2011, 18:09 ] |
Post subject: | ASUS is going to RMA the |
ASUS is going to RMA the motherboard and because of its price they will cross ship it so I dont have to figure out how to safely store a CPU in a dorm room without its original packaging. |
Author: | packerfan [ 04 Oct 2011, 05:16 ] |
Post subject: | Update:New motherboard came |
Update: New motherboard came in, rev 3.1 instead (different usb 3.0 controller I believe) Popped it in and got it to power up with a lovely CPU error light. So now to see about RMAing my processor. |
Author: | Gilly [ 04 Oct 2011, 12:18 ] |
Post subject: | I will be shocked if the CPU |
I will be shocked if the CPU is faulty. I guess it is something with the PSU. |
Author: | Paradigm Shifter [ 04 Oct 2011, 12:51 ] |
Post subject: | Wouldn't be unheard of for it |
Wouldn't be unheard of for it to be the CPU. The Sandy Bridge chips have so much on them beyond what it traditionally understood to be a 'CPU' that any one bit of it going wobbly will take the CPU as a whole down with it. It's unusual, but not impossible. I'd get the PSU checked out (PSU testers aren't expensive) to give you piece of mind on that front, but usually when a PSU blows, you don't get anything, rather than CPU failed or whatever. |
Author: | Valk [ 04 Oct 2011, 13:23 ] |
Post subject: | Hi Packerfan, sorry to hear |
Hi Packerfan, sorry to hear about your PC troubles. To echo what the guys above said, I would certainly get your PSU tested before plugging in any new CPU. Ive had PSUs in the past which appear fine, even boot a PC but fall over as soon as the load increases. Years ago I had one go open circuit and fry the entire board so Ive never bought cheap ones since and always try to get a decent known brand with good inbuilt protection. Well worth getting yours tested for peace of mind. |
Author: | packerfan [ 06 Oct 2011, 00:06 ] |
Post subject: | Should I still consider |
Should I still consider getting it tested if it is a new Corsair HX850?, I thought it was a pretty good quality PSU. The cpu won't get sent out til friday from me and has a few day turn around so I have some time to order a psu tester. Second, any recommendations on a psu tester? what about just testing with a multimeter? Should I spend a little more to get 8 pin mobo and pci-express connectors (frozen cpu has one for 23 bucks) |
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