Girlfriends new PC build won't start.
CommunistWithAGun
Local Propaganda Guy Join Date: 2003-04-30 Member: 15953Members
in Off-Topic
<div class="IPBDescription">Press button, fans spin up, but not CPU fan. Shuts off.</div>Title and description covers the symptom. I am not exactly computer stupid, so I thought "easy, I'll have it going in a heartbeat"
Hah.
This really defies all logic. Let me start from the beginning. She wanted a system similar to mine, so we went with a Q6600, 9800 GX2, 4GB of DDR2 800, A cannibalized set of optical drives, new but cheap SATA drive. The motherboard is a GIGABYTE GA-EP45-UD3R ATX Intel Motherboard, power supply is a CORSAIR CMPSU-550VX 550W ATX12V V2.2 SLI Ready CrossFire Ready 80 PLUS Certified Active PFC Compatible with Core i7 Power Supply - Retail
Here's the problem. She presses the power button, internal motherboard LED's light, drives spin up, internal fan spins up, GPU fan spins up...CPU fan does nothing, it then shuts off.
I thought, okay, heat sink not installed properly. Turns out she installed it without removing the little thingy covering the thermal pad. I had her use some isopropyl alcohol and gently remove the remnants of the thermal pad from the CPU and sink. I then had her apply a thin line of new grease directly to the CPU IHS, in the proper place. She put the sink back on, and of course, still no love.
All connections are in the right spot, she even RMA'd the board once and the PSU once, we've tried a barebones install with 1 memory, no drives, etc. Always the same.
At this point I'm thinking dead heatsink or CPU, but I highly doubt that.
Hah.
This really defies all logic. Let me start from the beginning. She wanted a system similar to mine, so we went with a Q6600, 9800 GX2, 4GB of DDR2 800, A cannibalized set of optical drives, new but cheap SATA drive. The motherboard is a GIGABYTE GA-EP45-UD3R ATX Intel Motherboard, power supply is a CORSAIR CMPSU-550VX 550W ATX12V V2.2 SLI Ready CrossFire Ready 80 PLUS Certified Active PFC Compatible with Core i7 Power Supply - Retail
Here's the problem. She presses the power button, internal motherboard LED's light, drives spin up, internal fan spins up, GPU fan spins up...CPU fan does nothing, it then shuts off.
I thought, okay, heat sink not installed properly. Turns out she installed it without removing the little thingy covering the thermal pad. I had her use some isopropyl alcohol and gently remove the remnants of the thermal pad from the CPU and sink. I then had her apply a thin line of new grease directly to the CPU IHS, in the proper place. She put the sink back on, and of course, still no love.
All connections are in the right spot, she even RMA'd the board once and the PSU once, we've tried a barebones install with 1 memory, no drives, etc. Always the same.
At this point I'm thinking dead heatsink or CPU, but I highly doubt that.
Comments
In any case, the motherboard manual and more data is required. If all else fails, try resetting the bios settings. It's usually a jumper somewhere.
Manual is located here <a href="http://www.gigabyte.com.tw/Support/Motherboard/Manual_Model.aspx?ProductID=2921" target="_blank">http://www.gigabyte.com.tw/Support/Motherb...?ProductID=2921</a>
I thought maybe there was a chance that the parts weren't compatable...but they are. :\
Also used a volt meter on the PSU...It's fine :\
Try the same chip in your rig if you've got the same socket.
--Scythe--
If it doesn't POST at all, it's not even getting into the BIOS, which was why I thought of the power thing.
What Scythe said is about all you can do. You need a second rig to swap each part out on one at a time. Debugging hardware's a pain. <img src="style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/smile-fix.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":)" border="0" alt="smile-fix.gif" />
1) Remove EVERYTHING from the case
2) Set the motherboard on a non conductive surface. The motherboard box is perfect for this. DO NOT PLACE THE MOTHERBOARD ON THE STATIC BAG! It can actually conduct electricity! We are going to try and assemble a running system outside of the case.
3) Install the CPU and heat sink.
4) Install 1 stick of RAM.
5) Install the video card and attach the power supply connection(s) to the card if your card needs it.
6) Connect the monitor to the video card.
7) Connect the power supply to the motherboard with both the 24pin main ATX Power connection and the separate 4 or 8 pin power connection.
8) Connect power to the power supply.
9) Do NOT connect ANYTHING else. Make sure you have the power connector on the CPU fan connected.
10) Use a small screwdriver to momentarily short the power switch connector on the motherboard. Consult your motherboard manual to find which two pins connect to your case's power switch. Then touch both pins with a screwdriver to complete the circuit and boot the system.
If all is well, it should power up and you should get a display. Then assemble the parts into the case and try again. If the system now fails to boot, you have a short in the case and need to recheck your motherboard standoffs.
If the system does not boot after this process, then you most likely have a faulty component. You'll need to swap parts, start with the power supply, until you determine what is defective.
1) one day, vid card wasn't being recognized at all. visual inspection. looks fine. oh well, remove it, unplug vid card power, restart, power down, replace vid card and connections, works just fine.
2) installed everything. no post. remove everything. reinstall everything. post. i swear nothing was installed wrong.
3) another time the heatsink/fan was installed correctly but for some reason was not tight enough to hug the processor case and it wouldn't post because of instant overheat. proc wasn't damaged though.
my shoddy hypothesis: sometimes the alignment of installed components is off by a hair. This can be exaggerated by within-tolerance manufacturing defects. Or maybe some tiny dust bunny or hair got in somewhere. The solution is to just remove all the components and put them back in. Maybe with a little extra nudge in one direction or the other. Also weird charge configs can build in caps when mobo has design flaws?
it's like Einstein said something like: "he who does the same thing expecting different results is insane."
Be insane.
of course this advice is for you after you tried everything else and it didn't work
he did it twice.
My reading comprehension! It huuuuurts!
Right, that an intelligent MOBO wont allow the machine too boot, cause your CPU will overheat. Hence you sometimes have to short the CPU-Fan contacts, when using watercooling.
Edit: Read: Just get the CPU fan to spin and your mobo will boot. Buy another fan, short the contacts or if you are unlucky get a whole new mobo <img src="style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad-fix.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":(" border="0" alt="sad-fix.gif" />
The CPU FAN has usually 3 contatcs on the mobo. 1 neg 1 pos and 1 probe. Shorting pos and neg should do.
What.
Please no.
Put a 1k resistor across it please, as a minimum.
--Scythe--
Read: Touch the red and black wires together. <img src="style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/tounge.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":p" border="0" alt="tounge.gif" />
my shoddy hypothesis: sometimes the alignment of installed components is off by a hair. This can be exaggerated by within-tolerance manufacturing defects. Or maybe some tiny dust bunny or hair got in somewhere. The solution is to just remove all the components and put them back in. Maybe with a little extra nudge in one direction or the other. Also weird charge configs can build in caps when mobo has design flaws?<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Experienced this also, although it was because the heatsink phsyically didn't fit correctly. I had to rig up a solution with zip-ties.