Power supply fault..??

Mar 11, 2018
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Hello
PC Specs;
Intel Core-i5 6500k
Asus H110M-K DDR4 motherboard
Kingston 8 gb DDR4 + corsair LPX 8gb ddr4
2 x 1 TB SATA HDD + 128gb ssd
ASUS NVIDIA GT730
local power supply rating 450w
the problem is that whenever i turn on my pc it goes into BIOS. this all happened when i installed an ssd but my powersupply only had 2 SATA power cable and 2 IDE power cable. so in order to install my ssd i bought a IDE to SATA power cable through which i was able to install my SSD.

Now whenever my pc boots, it goes into BIOS, if i unplug one of my HDD the problem goes away. someone sugested me to buy a new 500w powersupply with complete sata outlet. WILL IT RESOLVE MY PROBLEM.????
 
Solution
I would record any overclock, XMP settings, fan settings, and the boot priority list. Then reset the BIOS to the default setting. And then save the settings when you exit the BIOS. That should fix the problem.

Make sure that all drives are installed when the defaults are reset. Then make sure that all of the drives show up in the BIOS. Then renter the setting recorded earlier. Make sure that the Boot Priority list has the system drive at the top of the list and the optical drive second. Then exit saving settings again
I would record any overclock, XMP settings, fan settings, and the boot priority list. Then reset the BIOS to the default setting. And then save the settings when you exit the BIOS. That should fix the problem.

Make sure that all drives are installed when the defaults are reset. Then make sure that all of the drives show up in the BIOS. Then renter the setting recorded earlier. Make sure that the Boot Priority list has the system drive at the top of the list and the optical drive second. Then exit saving settings again
 
Solution
I am guessing that when you installed the drive that you disconnected the system drive at some point.
That drive was originally set at the top of the boot priority list. As a result the BIOS doesn't have the system drive defined. Therefore at boot-up it is opening the BIOS for you to select the system drive (with the operating system).