On Feb 20, 12:06 am, reed.emm....TakeThisOut@gmail.com wrote:
> Pressing the power button turns on the power (fans run, HDs run) but
> the system does not boot or show video. Also the Power/HD LEDs do not
> come on.
Paul suggests many obvious inspections - ie are all connectors
properly seated. After that, then the only thing we know is that
anything inside computer might be defective. Next step is to
establish what is or is not working - a definitive answer.
For example, did speaker beep? If it did, then CPU and some
motherboard functions are OK - definitively good. If not, then those
same functions are either defective (definitively bad) or 'unknown'.
The world is ternary. Objective is to establish components as
definitively something - to eliminate that third state: unknown.
Fans can spin; lights illuminate - and a power supply system can
still be completely defective. More parts than just a power supply.
Two minutes with a multimeter (a tool so ubiquitous as to be sold even
to Kmart shoppers) will define that power supply 'system' as
'definitively something'. If 'definitively good', then move on to
other suspects and never again look back at the entire power supply
'system'. If you replace a power supply, 'definitive something' still
does not exist, more money is spent, and answer takes many times
longer.
Once a supply 'system' is known good, then other suspects can be
considered. But if the supply 'system' is unknown, than anything else
can also appear defective when it is really OK.
The less than two minute procedure is "When your computer dies
without warning....." starting 6 Feb 2007 in the newsgroup
alt.windows-xp at:
http://tinyurl.com/yvf9vh
Connector chart to locate each color:
http://www.hardwarebook.net/connector/power/atxpower.html
Numbers from that procedure means the better informed will provide
posts. Based upon what you have posted, the better informed can only
speculate a list of suspects far longer than what Paul has provided.
Will you replace all those items (shotgun)? Numbers mean others can
point quickly to a shorter list OR immediately identify the suspect
without speculation.
Meanwhile, Paul's beep codes are also informative; provided
definitive facts. Speculation results in wasted money and more time.
If you don't know what those beep codes report, then post them here
along with motherboard / BIOS manufacturer.
Reading this post takes longer than to obtain those definitive
numbers.
>> Stay informed about: P5N-E board doesn't load.