MY PC IS DED!!! PLEASE HELP ME….

defectu

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Jan 13, 2011
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PC info:
MB- ASUS P7H57D-V EVO
CPU- Intel i5 quad core s-1156
PSU- X-Power ATX 700w
2 x nVidia GTX 280 SLI
2 x 2 Tb. WD HDD
4 x 2Gb DDR 3 1600 mhz.
Trouble:
Yesterday when I tried to turn it on- it shut himself down in less than a second
I changed the PSU – same thing
I replaced DDR with new-same thing
I removed all parts from mother board except CPU and power connectors-same thing
When I turn it on, I see a flash of the CPU led and DDR led….I have no idea if The CPU is busted or mother board….or booth of them…..The CPU fan start to spin for a fraction of a second and that is all my PC is doing for the moment.
PLEASE HELP ME….
 
What kind of PSU was your second PSU?

Pull one of your video cards and the second hard drive.

Work systematically through our standard checklist and troubleshooting thread:
http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/261145-31-read-posting-boot-problems
I mean work through, not just read over it. We spent a lot of time on this. It should find most of the problems.

If not, continue.

I have tested the following beep patterns on Gigabyte, eVGA, and ECS motherboards. Other BIOS' may be different, but they all use a single short beep for a successful POST.

Breadboard - that will help isolate any kind of case problem you might have.
http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/262730-31-breadboarding

Breadboard with just motherboard, CPU & HSF, case speaker, and PSU.

Make sure you plug the CPU power cable in. The system will not boot without it.

I always breadboard a new build. It takes only a few minutes, and you know you are putting good parts in the case once you are finished.

You can turn on the PC by momentarily shorting the two pins that the case power switch goes to. You should hear a series of long, single beeps indicating memory problems. Silence indicates a problem with (in most likely order) the PSU, motherboard, or CPU. Remember, at this time, you do not have a graphics card installed so the load on your PSU will be reduced.

If no beeps:
Running fans and drives and motherboard LED's do not necessarily indicate a good PSU. In the absence of a single short beep, they also do not indicate that the system is booting.

At this point, you can sort of check the PSU. Try to borrow a known good PSU of around 550 - 600 watts. That will power just about any system with a single GPU. If you cannot do that, use a DMM to measure the voltages. Measure between the colored wires and either chassis ground or the black wires. Yellow wires should be 12 volts. Red wires: +5 volts, orange wires: +3.3 volts, blue wire : -12 volts, violet wire: 5 volts always on. Tolerances are +/- 5% except for the -12 volts which is +/- 10%.

The gray wire is really important. It should go from 0 to +5 volts when you turn the PSU on with the case switch. CPU needs this signal to boot.

You can turn on the PSU by completely disconnecting the PSU and using a paperclip or jumper wire to short the green wire to one of the neighboring black wires.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5FWXgQSokF4&feature=youtube_gdata

A way that might be easier is to use the main power plug. Working from the back of the plug where the wires come out, use a bare paperclip to short between the green wire and one of the neighboring black wires. That will do the same thing with an installed PSU. It is also an easy way to bypass a questionable case power switch.

This checks the PSU under no load conditions, so it is not completely reliable. But if it can not pass this, it is dead. Then repeat the checks with the PSU plugged into the computer to put a load on the PSU.

If the system beeps:
If it looks like the PSU is good, install a memory stick. Boot. Beep pattern should change to one long and several short beeps indicating a missing graphics card.

Silence, long single beeps, or series of short beeps indicate a problem with the memory. If you get short beeps verify that the memory is in the appropriate motherboard slots.

Insert the video card and connect any necessary PCIe power connectors. Boot. At this point, the system should POST successfully (a single short beep). Notice that you do not need keyboard, mouse, monitor, or drives to successfully POST.
At this point, if the system doesn't work, it's either the video card or an inadequate PSU. Or rarely - the motherboard's PCIe interface.

Here's where you would test the second video card.

Now start connecting the rest of the devices starting with the monitor, then keyboard and mouse, then the rest of the devices, testing after each step. It's possible that you can pass the POST with a defective video card. The POST routines can only check the video interface. It cannot check the internal parts of the video card.
 

defectu

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I tried 3 other PCU-brand new(one removed from a working unit)
I replaced memory with 2 x 2Gb/1600 Mhz(brand new)
I removed both VGA and used onboard PCIe
I disconnect other HDD and used only the main one
I disconnect the pins from power button and tried with a screwdriver
Still the same problem....It moves for a half second and dies. I noticed before a message ‘’ CPU fan error ‘’ –but the fan was spinning at that point. I use X4 akasa CPU cooler. Is having a big radiator and I think that even if the cooler will not work he will still cool enough the CPU, beside that, there are 4 other coolers installed to provide a proper air flow.
If I could figure out which one is busted…the CPU or the MB or booth…I will buy another CPU or to upgrade the system with an second generation Intel i5, quad core 3.4Ghz CPU s 1155 and a proper MB
I will probably throw away the mother board and the CPU and buy a new one because my brain does not help me as much I would like!!!!
Tks for all your help and if you think that is something else I should try please advice!!!!


 

Hastibe

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Something similar happened to me, but I didn't have any spare parts to even narrow it down to just the motherboard and/or CPU, so I ended up taking it to a computer repair shop, and they were able to test all the components for $55.

It was worth it, my motherboard was dead, but my PSU also was (and I did have a spare PSU that I tried, but of course it didn't work, because it was the motherboard that wasn't working, too--so keep a situation like that in mind!).
 

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