Gigabyte board rapid continuous beeping no video, locked into boot cycle

IratePirate

Commendable
May 6, 2016
3
0
1,510
Hello there. New member here, been having some major problems with my PC.

Specs are (can't remember them off hand)
GTX 660 GPU
I5-330 3.3ghz CPU
CX600 Corsair PSU
Seagate 1 TB SATA HDD
Kingston KVR1333D3N9/8G RAM (single stick)
Optical drive

My PC has been running fine since early 2013 on the whole with no major hiccups that I can recall. While opening up something in Unreal Engine 4 my PC hung badly and I had to turn it off at the wall. When I turned it back on the motherboard POST system was beeping rapidly and continuously until it automatically shut itself off about ten seconds later, then it would turn itself back on a few seconds later. At this point video still seemed to work as it made an effort to reach BIOS. After opening the PC up, doing some cleaning and fiddling around with stuff to see what was wrong it does the same beeping and reboot cycle but now no video is displayed. All the fans are running on the various components. I assume it is some sort of RAM, PSU or motherboard error. I bought a new stick of RAM (I was going to do it at some point anyway) and swapped the original stick out but the same beeping continued to occur. Perhaps something has shorted out?

I'm not too good at thi
 
Solution
now thn it comes down to mobo, ram, psu and processor...it cud be anything...the ram being new, most unlikely though...
i m afraid at this stage u gotta go to a professional shop and do some testing with substitute hardwares to narrow down the faulty component...
or if u have extra hardwares, u can do it urself...

IratePirate

Commendable
May 6, 2016
3
0
1,510


Thanks for replying man. The same constant beeping continues until reboot 10 seconds after power on with the HDD unplugged and GPU unplugged and removed.
 
now thn it comes down to mobo, ram, psu and processor...it cud be anything...the ram being new, most unlikely though...
i m afraid at this stage u gotta go to a professional shop and do some testing with substitute hardwares to narrow down the faulty component...
or if u have extra hardwares, u can do it urself...
 
Solution

IratePirate

Commendable
May 6, 2016
3
0
1,510


Gonna see if there is any more advice people can give before just sucking it up and having someone charge me to check it out, and yeah I don't have any replacements so there's no way to test it myself which is annoying. I don't want to buy a new motherboard or PSU only to find out it isn't the problem so I was wondering if there were ways of narrowing it down.
 
no...u dont buy unless...u r sure...
in this part of the world...a professional shop always diagnoses the issue first with substitute hardwares...before narrowing it down to the faulty component...
and they dont charge for tht...
thy locate the issue and suggest u the remedy...accepting the resolution is upto u...
dont knw abt ur part of the world...