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| RAM and Power Supply Support Support forum for memory and power supplies; Kingston, Corsair, PNY |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 9
OS: Win XP Pro
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Hi all. New poster with weird problem.
Set up: AMD K7, 256Mb memory, AMI bios Video from NVidia GEforce FX5200 2048kb, AGP Running WinXP Pro Recently replaced my PSU when the old one gave ceased working. OK, confession time. The old one gave up when I was trying to connect up an extra hard drive, so I fear that I may have fried something through static. Anyway, new PSU is XPower ATX-400TD. The old one that it replaced was the 300W model that came with the case. When I now press power button to switch on, fans come on, lights for CD flash and all sounds as per usual. Except that the monitor doesn't always come out of sleep. If I hold down the power button to switch off and then try again, the monitor will then wake up and all is fine. But if I then reboot again, back to square one - fans, lights but a sleeping monitor! I've taken the new PSU back in case it was faulty - got an identical replacement and got identical problems. Outputs of old/new PSUs as follows: Old. Maxima 300W: +3.3V 16A +5V 20A +12V 10A -5V 1A -12V 1A +5VSB 2A New. X-Power ATX-400TD 400W: +3.3V 30A +5V 28A +12V 17A -5V 1A -12V 1A +5VSB 2A Ideas anyone? Here are my thoughts to date: 1. PSU faulty? Unlikely as I've just swapped it out again. 2. PSU not up to the job? Also unlikely as my old 300W unit has been replaced with a 400W unit which delivers at least as much power on each rail? 3. Poor Power_OK signal from PSU? If this is the case, why does it work on the second boot but not the third? 4. Damaged motherboard or video card? Possible, but why this regular works/doesn't work pattern? Expect I'm going to have to replace more parts, but which to try next? |
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#5 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 9
OS: Win XP Pro
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Quote:
I'm away from PC at the moment but will try the pencil eraser trick at the weekend. |
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#8 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 9
OS: Win XP Pro
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Quote:
VCoreA 1.66V: 1.65- 1.66 +3.3V: 3.28- 3.28 +5V: 4.92- 4.95 +12V: 11.50- 11.60 -5V: 1.89- 1.94 12V: 0.64- 0.80 +5VSB: 4.92- 4.97 +VBAT: 0.00- 0.00 |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Manager, Hardware Forums
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: west australia
Posts: 42,011
OS: vista 32x ultimate retail
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all the lines are showing under voltage if the bios lists your volts double check them in there
if the same take it back for a 450w
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#10 (permalink) |
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Roaming To Help
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 5,609
OS: Many
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Look at your battery reading -- its reading dead.
Is the BIOS reading the same? Also was this reading taken while your PSU was under a little load (a few demanding processes running)? If it wasn't your voltages would be out of acceptability when you do and its a naft PSU -- probably too low for the spec you require. I wouldn't go with that PSU because its bound to cause problems later on. Get something decent and known trustable. Last edited by Kalim : 02-03-2007 at 11:23 AM. |
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#11 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 9
OS: Win XP Pro
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Quote:
Vcore 1.674V +3.30V 3.340V +5.00V 5.056-5.084V +12.00V 12.193V So bios showing higher voltage than Sensor Pro. But in any case, the PSU is sold with tolerance of +-5% on each rail (+-10% on -12V) ... so it looks to me like each of the rails is within spec? |
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#13 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 9
OS: Win XP Pro
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Quote:
Why do you say I need 18A ... good rule of thumb or more categorical? (The previous PSU was 300W and only delivered 10A on +12V. OK, this whole saga started when the previous PSU gave up but that was after a few years of happy PC power with no upgrades to the system to lead to a higher drain). |
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#15 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 9
OS: Win XP Pro
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Quote:
I've tried monitoring the voltages with a few applications running (Word, graphics, Powerpoint and Media Player, all together) and the readings have been broadly the same. |
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