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    Gforce 8600 GT capacitors

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    • I Desconectado
      ircop38 @XaviJS
      Última edición por

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      gracias por contestar

      intuyes bien, no se cmoo se suelda, intentare buscar alguna persona que me ayude,

      funcionaba muy bien, a ver si logro arreglarla y si no pues a otra cosa.

      salu2

      incrediboyI 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
      • incrediboyI Desconectado
        incrediboy Veteranos HL @ircop38
        Última edición por

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        lo peor es que si tu grafica ha sufrido picos de tension, otros componentes de tu pc pueden estar algo tocados. la fuente de alimentacion que tienes es una decente o es una de esas grises de los chinos?

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        • I Desconectado
          ircop38 @incrediboy
          Última edición por

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          Tengon una buena fuenta de alimentacion, me costo sobre 70€ hace 3 años

          Igual me ha servido para que no se haya ido todo el equipo al garete.

          salu2

          XaviJSX 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
          • XaviJSX Desconectado
            XaviJS Veteranos HL @ircop38
            Última edición por

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            Si la fuente es buena no debería haber dado picos de tensión. Pero bueno, siempre se peude dar el factor de una gráfica defectuosa. Si la tienes en garantía ya sabes…

            Saludos!

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            • R Desconectado
              rubendrift @XaviJS
              Última edición por

              Hello ircop, the same thing happened to me too. But this has been going on for a while, as sometimes I would hear firecrackers but didn't know what they were, until I saw the graphics card. At the store where I bought a new card, they told me to check the voltage of the power supply, and after doing so, there are some values that instead of giving me 12v, give me 11.25 and another gives me 10.9. Do you think the power supply might be faulty?
              Thanks.

              SylverS Bm4nB 2 Respuestas Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
              • SylverS Desconectado
                Sylver Veteranos HL @rubendrift
                Última edición por

                @rubendrift:

                Hello ircop, I've had the same thing happen to me too. But this has been going on for a while, as sometimes I would hear firecrackers but didn't know what they were, until I saw the graphics card. At the store where I bought a new card, they told me to check the power supply voltage, and after doing so, there are some values that instead of giving me 12 V give me 11.25 and another gives me 10.9. Do you think the power supply might be faulty?
                Thanks.

                It doesn't have to be, in fact, it's common to see power supplies that don't usually reach the exact 12 V on that line, and others that even go a little over, it's always a small difference.
                The problem would be if instead of giving 12 V on its line, it gave 8 or something like that.

                Regards

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                >> Intel Core2Duo E6600 Conroe @2.4GHz || Asus P5N32-SLI SE DELUXE || 2x1Gb DDR2 Kingston 800MHz || Asus nVidia GeForce 9800GT 1Gb GDDR3 || Seagate Barracuda IDE 80Gb 7200RPM || Linkworld LPK12-35 450W

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                • C Desconectado
                  CNCBCN @Sylver
                  Última edición por

                  I'm not sure, but I think the explanation is not entirely correct, and reading the entire thread could lead to confusion. Voltage spikes / voltage drops: the norm (not so much nowadays, except when people turn on their air conditioners / heaters at full blast) is that the spikes come from the electrical grid, due to the distributor of the moment. To solve this (or rather, to protect ourselves, because solving it ourselves doesn't solve anything), as far as I know, we can do three things (some more expensive, others cheaper):
                  option A Voltage spike suppressors is not exactly what I was looking for, but it serves as an example. Pros: protects the whole house. Cons: it's expensive, only protects against spikes
                  option B Soyntec® Protective Strip Powem™ 600 5 connections fax/modem, USB, child protection only PC EMI/RFI pros: it's cheap. Cons: only protects the PC, it's less precise than option A.
                  option B2 http://www.softworld.es/sai/ pros: it protects you from everything. Cons: it's pricey, only protects the PC, it needs maintenance (the battery doesn't last forever)
                  option C a decent power supply and a prayer to Santa Rita that if it blows up it doesn't annoy you ? pros: we all think we have it. Cons: if you realize it wasn't like that, the power supply, the motherboard, and everything Santa Rita wanted could have blown up :nono:.
                  another thing is that the power supply we have is so bad that during load moments it gives us voltage drops in one or several lines. This isn't something you can check by plugging in a multimeter and looking in two seconds what amperage it gives. We would have to load the power supply and stay a while with the multimeter to see the stability of the line. Through software we can see some lines (but I wouldn't trust it much).
                  SylverS 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
                  • SylverS Desconectado
                    Sylver Veteranos HL @CNCBCN
                    Última edición por

                    @CNCBCN:

                    another thing is that the source we have is so bad that at times of load it gives us voltage drops in one or several lines, this is not seen by plugging in the multimeter and looking in two seconds what amperage it gives, we would have to put a load on the source and stay a while with the multimeter to see the stability of the line. by software we can see some lines (but I wouldn't trust it much)

                    +1

                    The best thing is a prolonged measurement with the multimeter to evaluate the efficiency of the source in all lines, because the measurement by software or in the BIOS itself is not entirely reliable as CNCBCN comments.

                    Greetings

                    >> i7-2600K Sandy Bridge @4.4GHz || Noctua NH-D14 || ASRock Z77 Extreme4 || 4x8Gb G.Skill Ripjaws X DDR3 1600MHz || XFX RX 5700 XT 8Gb || SSD Samsung 850 PRO 256Gb & 850 EVO 500Gb || WD Caviar Green 1Tb || Barracuda 1Tb || Corsair TX650 V2 || M-Audio Fast Track Pro || KRK RP8 RoKit G3 || BenQ GW2750 27"
                    >> Athlon 64 X2 5600+ Brisbane @2.9GHz || Gigabyte GA-M61PME-S2 || 2x2Gb DDR2 Kingston 800MHz || Sapphire Radeon HD 5850 Xtreme 1Gb || Maxtor 320Gb SATA2 || OCZ ModXStream 500W Modular || TEAC PowerMax 120/2 || Acer X243w 24"
                    >> Intel Core2Duo E6600 Conroe @2.4GHz || Asus P5N32-SLI SE DELUXE || 2x1Gb DDR2 Kingston 800MHz || Asus nVidia GeForce 9800GT 1Gb GDDR3 || Seagate Barracuda IDE 80Gb 7200RPM || Linkworld LPK12-35 450W

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                    • Bm4nB Desconectado
                      Bm4n @rubendrift
                      Última edición por

                      @rubendrift:

                      Hello ircop, I've had the same problem too. But this has been going on for a while, as sometimes I would hear firecrackers but didn't know what they were, until I saw the graphics card. At the store where I bought a new card, they told me to check the power supply voltage, and after doing so, there are some values that instead of giving me 12v, give me 11.25 and another gives me 10.9. Do you think the power supply might be faulty?
                      Thanks.

                      If the line voltage varies too much you'll have problems, there's always some variation but it usually doesn't go beyond 5-10%. But the worst thing that can happen to a power supply is that it spikes, they never give a perfectly linear DC current but if it oscillates too much that can damage the components. Sometimes you can even see it with a program that monitors the voltages on the board.

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                      • C Desconectado
                        CNCBCN @Bm4n
                        Última edición por

                        I wasn't looking for this but …. http://www.hard-h2o.com/review/medidores/xilence-tester_2.html
                        then I edit and put what I continue to search for
                        it's not exactly but to give you an idea I think it's worth Traficantes de Hardware - Review Nox Apex 600 are the voltages in full and under load, in a magazine a while ago they did a comparison of F.A and the graphics were quite more explicit especially on the subject of stability, if I find it I will try to scan it

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                        • Jesus_PanellaJ Desconectado
                          Jesus_Panella @CNCBCN
                          Última edición por

                          The voltage variation should NEVER be more than 5% both upwards and downwards. To make it clear, for the +12V line, the power supply should give a real value between a range of 11.4 V and 12.6 V.

                          Outside of these values, it could cause problems in some of the components.

                          The same applies to the 3.3V and 5V lines

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                          • Bm4nB Desconectado
                            Bm4n @Jesus_Panella
                            Última edición por

                            True, in the 12V case, 5% would be a lot, but in the 3.3V case, with a bad source, you can encounter more variation.

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