I'm sorry to hear about your cpu and possibly the motherboard...If you get absolutely nothing... no power on self test (POST) then maybe the problem is in the power supply. The processor won't get any power until the POST checks for stability and proper voltage. Do PS's come with fuses or breakers? Just a thought...
sys specs: Gigabyte 7NNXP MoBo AMD XP 3000+ CPU 1.5 MB GeIL PC3200 RAM Gigabyte nVidia Gforce 6800GT GC
How did you KNOW that it was the CPU in the first place?
As to the power supply........ did you put a multimeter on the various outputs to see if they are indicating the correct voltage? Of course, that would not tell you if the voltage is correct under load conditions.... but it is a start.
Because a small wisp of smoke came right out of the CPU fan.
I'll use some of my dad's tools to see if it really is the PSU. He has this strange thingy, where you put whatever you're measuring in between two pincers and it'll tell you the output.
Can a CPU really damage other parts of the PC when it goes out? Like the PSU or the graphics?
PSU: 12v, 3,3v and 5v output... the difference is in the available load.
You need to do a trick with some of the connector pins to get the PSU to switch from standby to running mode, or you will only find the 5v standby power
[quote].....I'll use some of my dad's tools to see if it really is the PSU.
Last edited by Fozzer on Sun Sep 26, 2004 2:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Win 8.1 64-bit. DX11. Advent Tower. Intel i7-3770 3.9 GHz 8-core. 8 GB System RAM. AMD Radeon HD 7700 1GB RAM. DVD ROM. 2 Terra Byte SATA Hard Drive. Philips 17" LCD Monitor. Saitek Cyborg X Fly-5 Joystick. ...and a Briggs and Stratton Petrol Lawn Mower.
In fact.... we should probably mention her that inside that case ,....... although it is not easy to find.... can be some voltages that could be lethal.
So be caredul there Scorpion. MOST stuff in the case is low voltages.... but the power supply "inner workings" is another story.
You really probably don't want to go poking around inside the PS box. ;)
Scorpion, have you got an old mobo & PSU to test your individual components? it indeed sounds to me like the PSU is dead, worryingly, it could be the reason your 1'st cpu went bang!
I'd slip your local PC store a few $ to test the PSU before (which it seems too late ,as you've tried the new cpu already...? ) you re-assemble the pc.
also, remove the mobo battery (to clear the CMOS RAM). I've found this helped me get back a mobo that had died after an extreme overclock.
Did what we discussed work then??? ;)
Posting drivel here since Jan 31st, 2002. - That long! "He who laughs last, thinks slowest."
I haven't done any overclocking, but I'll try the battery anyway.
I can say it's not my hard drive or graphics card, because I'm using them both on the old PC right now. (drive as slave) It can now only be the MOBO, RAM or PSU. As I'm using the graphics and drive, and the CPU is brand new.
The best I can hope for is it being the PSU, despite being new. A new PSU is a lot cheaper than a new MOBO.