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    Motherboard problems?

    Programado Fijo Cerrado Movido Procesadores, placas base y memorias
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    • R Desconectado
      radge
      Última edición por

      Hello, I have a PC with Windows 7 32 bits and it is composed of an ASUS P5QL/EPU motherboard with an Intel Pentium D micro at 3.0 Ghz and it restarts every "x" time, I would say it's the fan but I'm not sure.

      I have installed a program called Open Hardware monitor and the Tº of the motherboard is constantly marked at 31º and the MICRO's is marked between 44-47º at rest and when I give it some strain it goes up to 50º or 52º.
      And the graphics card a Radeon HD 2600 is constantly at 58º it doesn't move from there.

      Do you think it could be or what should I look at? What should I check?

      Thanks,

      tesla tienda :)

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      • NemoN Desconectado
        Nemo Veteranos HL
        Última edición por

        The truth is, resets can be due to anything.

        To begin with, you have to rule out hardware problems:
        Does it beep when starting up? (check if the motherboard speaker is connected).
        Run a test on the hard drive to see its status, with CrystalDisk Info for example.
        Is the graphics card clean and has good temperatures?
        What power supply do you have? etc..

        Then, software problems, these are more complex, because a simple incompatibility between two programs can already create failures and conflicts.
        Update all the drivers of the components or even reinstall them again.
        The most advisable thing is to reinstall everything to have a clean computer, but of course it's a pain…

        Best regards

        Mis equipos

        R 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
        • R Desconectado
          radge @Nemo
          Última edición por

          Thanks for your response, I'll reply in bold.

          @Nemo:

          The truth is, reboots can be due to anything.

          To begin with, we must rule out hardware problems:
          Does it beep when starting up? (check if the motherboard speaker is connected).
          No, when it restarts it makes a "beep" like when it starts up and continues loading Windows.

          Run a test on the hard drive to see its status, with CrystalDisk Info for example.
          Attached is a graph

          Is the graphics card clean and has good temperatures?
          Yes, it's an Ati HD 2600 and when I turned on the PC it was at 58º and after 4 hours on it's now at 60º, what temperature should the graphics card be at?

          What power supply do you have? etc...
          The PC only has a motherboard, a DVD reader and the power supply I think is a generic 230W I think... of the normal 40€ ones

          Then, software problems, these are more complex, because a simple incompatibility between two programs can already create failures and conflicts.
          Update all the drivers of the components or even reinstall them again.
          The most advisable is to reinstall everything to have a clean team, but of course it's a pain...
          Windows 7 has been clean for 2 weeks, I installed Windows 7 with Office 2007 and updated the drivers with Drivers Genius Profesional, so I rule out Windows (besides with the Windows XP I had it also did it, in fact I formatted it and put Win7 thinking it would be that).
          Regards

          tesla tienda :)

          NemoN 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
          • NemoN Desconectado
            Nemo Veteranos HL @radge
            Última edición por

            You say that you already did it with Windows XP, that almost rules out the software.
            Any particular situation before each restart? It restarts when you are playing, when it has been on for a long time, with many programs open…
            Understand that you must give clues...;D;D
            Carefully examine the board for any bulging capacitors, check the BIOS for RAM voltages and latencies and confirm it with CPU-Z.

            Best regards

            Mis equipos

            R 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
            • R Desconectado
              radge @Nemo
              Última edición por

              Well it's my dad's PC and no, he doesn't play games, he just uses it to look at the internet and do the odd "word" and "excel".
              Right now I've been messing around with it for about 4 hours and it hasn't restarted. Also I just did a memtest and it's 100% ok, 0 errors so it doesn't seem to be ram.
              Thanks,

              tesla tienda :)

              SylverS 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
              • SylverS Desconectado
                Sylver Veteranos HL @radge
                Última edición por

                I think that generic power supply might be failing…
                It would be advisable for you to measure the voltage it delivers on each line with a multimeter.

                Best regards

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                • R Desconectado
                  radge @Sylver
                  Última edición por

                  @Sylver:

                  I think that generic power supply might be failing…
                  It would be advisable that you measure the voltage it delivers on each line with a multimeter.

                  Regards

                  Hi, a multimeter is what we commonly call a "tester". I don't have one, but I suppose I could get one at work. Then, what is the point of origin and destination? From the tips of the power supply that comes from the power supply itself to where?

                  Thanks,

                  tesla tienda :)

                  NemoN 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
                  • NemoN Desconectado
                    Nemo Veteranos HL @radge
                    Última edición por

                    Although it wouldn't be a bad idea to check the power supply voltages, I don't know if it would shed light on the problem, if the power supply gives voltage peaks or drops.
                    The ideal thing would be for you to try a few days with another power supply and do tests using the PC intensively.
                    Regards.

                    Mis equipos

                    SylverS 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
                    • SylverS Desconectado
                      Sylver Veteranos HL @Nemo
                      Última edición por

                      @Nemo:

                      Although it wouldn't be a bad idea to check the power supply voltages, I'm not sure if it would shed any light on the problem, if the power supply has voltage spikes or drops.
                      The ideal thing would be for you to try a few days with another power supply and run tests using the PC intensively.
                      Best regards.

                      +1

                      And the multimeter is used by placing the ends on the cables that supply the current of each line, depending on the colors they have, but for example in a generic power supply the normal thing is one on the black cable and the other on any of the other cables that accompany it (red, white...) the one that gives you the value closest to that of the line is the correct one (+12V, +5V...)

                      Regards

                      >> 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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                      • incrediboyI Desconectado
                        incrediboy Veteranos HL @Sylver
                        Última edición por

                        with a tester you would probably have the voltages that the power supply normally gives, but even so it could have peaks very occasionally. as they have told you, the best thing is that you try with another power supply, the generic ones usually give quite a few problems

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