r-barker Posted January 21, 2012 Posted January 21, 2012 Hello! I built a new system this week and it's not booting to bios, all that happens is the fans start up, along with the HDD for around 3-4 seconds then shuts down and automatically starts again (in a loop). System Spec Intel Core i5-2500K 3.30GHz (Sandybridge) Socket LGA1155 Processor - OEM OcUK ATI Radeon HD 6850 1024MB GDDR5 PCI-Express Graphics Card Gigabyte Z68AP-D3 Intel Z68 (Socket 1155) DDR3 Motherboard Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 500GB SATA 6Gb/s 16MB Cache - OEM (ST500DM002) BitFenix Shinobi Gaming Case - Black OcUK Swift 650W V2 Silent Power Supply Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 Pro Rev 2 CPU Cooler (Socket 939/AM2/AM3/775/1155/1156/1366)) Kingston HyperX Blu 4GB (2x2GB) DDR3 PC3-12800C9 1600MHz Dual Channel Kit (KHX1600C9AD3B1K2/4G) I have taken the entire computer apart and tried again from scratch, yet I still get the same results. Everything is plugged in the correct places. I also checked underneath the motherboard to see if there was any m/f screws pointing up which could have been causing it to cut out, however there was none. All I can think of right now is that either the PSU is faulty, or the motherboard? Any suggestions? Would be appreciated! Quote
KenB Posted January 22, 2012 Posted January 22, 2012 Hi and welcome to ExTS All I can think of right now is that either the PSU is faulty, or the motherboard? My initial thoughts too - erring towards the PSU. Switch off at the wall - leave the plug in to maintain the earth / ground connection to the m/board. Unplug all external devices ( Printer / router etc ) Strip the m/board of all cards ( RAM / NIC / Video etc ) Unplug the power to the hard drive(s) and DVD Drive(s) Disconnect the drive data cables from the m/board end. leave ONLY the 20(4) way connectors from the PSU connected. Unscrew the m/board and sit it on a piece of card or folded newspaper to insulate it. Switch on. You should ( if you have an internal speaker connected ) get POST beeps. The fans should run constantly. If you don't get this condition then there is definitely a problem with either the PSU or the m/board. If you have a multimeter or voltmeter I can give you a link to test the PSU. Put the m/back on the stand-offs and switch on again. If the restarting continues from this point there is a short between the m/board and the case caused by one of the stand-offs. Put the components / connections back one at a time, testing after each, until you locate the cause of the problem. Quote There is an email going around offering processed pork - gelatin - and salt in a can ......this is simply SPAM !! MiniToolBoxNetwork TestWireless Test
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