Home Forums Gamescan Chat42 About
* Login   * Register * FAQ    * Search
It is currently Wed 06-18-2025 4:44AM

All times are UTC - 6 hours




Forum locked This topic is locked, you cannot edit posts or make further replies.  [ 28 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2  Next
Author Message
 Post subject: Computer fries countless times. why?!
PostPosted: Wed 03-17-2004 9:30PM 
Offline
Major
User avatar

Joined: Thu 09-04-2003 2:17PM
Posts: 392

Source: Off Campus
Ok. Shuttle board 400mhz. amd barton 2500. crucial 3200 512 ram. stock cooling. why does it fry two times in a row. getting parts from newegg. i heard about needed plastic washers to go around the screws that attach the mobo to case but i dont use them for mine. any ideas. ifve already made two comps so it cant be installation probs.


Top
 Profile  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Wed 03-17-2004 9:32PM 
Offline
Major
User avatar

Joined: Thu 09-04-2003 2:17PM
Posts: 392

Source: Off Campus
the first time it fried was cause of too small powersource, warned my friend bout that. but the second the comp ran for abotu 5 sec then fried.


Top
 Profile  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Wed 03-17-2004 9:40PM 
Offline
Major
User avatar

Joined: Wed 03-06-2002 4:47PM
Posts: 388

Source: Fidelity
when you say fry could you be more specific? and what board. I have two shuttle boards at 400 mhz. that have not done me wrong. are you using the heat sink paste?


Top
 Profile E-mail  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu 03-18-2004 2:07PM 
Offline
Major
User avatar

Joined: Thu 09-04-2003 2:17PM
Posts: 392

Source: Off Campus
The system fries as in the smell of burning electronics comes (first time it actually started smoking but that was cause of too little powersource). Um the shuttle board has dual ram no sata. i dont know what model. Um i didnt use thermal paste because the stock heatsink comes with a square grey thermal compound on the heatsink and the amd manual says to install heatsink straigh on processor not mentioning thermal paste. But still i cant be a cpu overheating because it happened in less then 5 sec.


Top
 Profile  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu 03-18-2004 2:55PM 
Offline
Major
User avatar

Joined: Wed 04-17-2002 3:51AM
Posts: 370
Location: On campus.

Source: Fidelity
Most certainly it can be a CPU frying in less than 5 seconds. Fire up a processor faster than 800Mhz or so (pulling that number out of my ass) withotu a heatsink on, and if it doesn't have thermal protection it will likely fry faster than that.

Anyway what is it that is frying? the mobo or the cpu? or the psu?


Top
 Profile E-mail  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu 03-18-2004 4:03PM 
Offline
Major

Joined: Fri 12-13-2002 7:50PM
Posts: 250

Source: Fidelity
Just to let you know, i had a XP1800+ that didnt have the heat sink mounted correctly to and it fried as soon as i hit the power... I mean burnt smell, smoke and the whole nine yards all in less than ten secs. Also it cant hurt to put a little grease on the heatsink before installing too. Not too much or you might crack the die.

However on the other hand, I had a duron 1.1 Ghz that I forgot to plug the fan in on and it lasted a full minute so....

_________________
Failure is the first step to success. I've done my part, the rest is up to you.


Top
 Profile  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu 03-18-2004 7:10PM 


Source: Somewhere
I second that... Just today i toasted my old athlon 1.1... I used the wrong CPU shim, and the heatsink never contacted the core. Turned on the PC, and within 5secs, it powers back off and smells bad. Athlons die FAST without a heatsink.

Put some grease on the processor, and put on the heatsink. Take the heatsink back off and make sure the grease has all squirted out. If so, then the heatsink is contacting it well, if not, then that is to blame.

-Plack


Top
  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu 03-18-2004 7:12PM 
Offline
Lieutenant
User avatar

Joined: Sat 09-07-2002 12:35PM
Posts: 53
Location: Linn, MO

Source: Off Campus
my bad! that last post was me. I am on a different machine that doesnt automatically log me in...

-Plack

_________________
-It has come to dissect our internal organs and feed them to the minions of Hades-

space pastries ate my cortex


Top
 Profile E-mail  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu 03-18-2004 7:34PM 
Offline
Colonel

Joined: Tue 03-18-2003 6:44PM
Posts: 747

Source: Farrar Hall
if you mount the hsf backwards, the raised part of the cpu socket will keep the hsf from being flush with the cpu

if you smelled burning electronics, you should also be able to see where something has burned. and even if you cant see it, you should be able to smell which individual part burned up.


Top
 Profile E-mail  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Fri 03-19-2004 12:34AM 


Source: Somewhere
mop wrote:
the first time it fried was cause of too small powersource, warned my friend bout that. but the second the comp ran for abotu 5 sec then fried.


Can you clarify that? I have never heard of any electronics "frying" becuase of lack of power? (unless its an opamp that has signal in, without rail voltage)

I have assembled many many computers in my time and have only "fried" something once. Maybe you are getting shitty parts? (e.g. shuttle motherboards)

I am not sure how you could hook any power or such, backwords. can you clarify on what part is failing? do you have multiple machines to test which part "died"?


Top
  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject: Re: Computer fries countless times. why?!
PostPosted: Fri 03-19-2004 10:28AM 
Offline
Colonel
User avatar

Joined: Wed 01-28-2004 12:45PM
Posts: 899
Location: The HOLE (Kelly A 013)

Source: Wilson Library
mop wrote:
...i heard about needed plastic washers to go around the screws that attach the mobo to case but i dont use them for mine. any ideas....


I hope I'm reading this wrong...

You are mounting the MOBO on posts, right? If you're screwing the sucker directly to the case, it'll arc over a capacitor or some other current-carrying component (say that 3 times fast) and it'll blow.

On the brighter (ha!) side of things, have you gotten any pretty light shows from all of this burned up computer stuff? I tried hanging a 90mm fan from my PSU grating with a twist tie... casing of the tie melted and I got the loveliest blue flash...

-jkpq45

_________________
DeeperBlue:
AMD A64 3400+ @ 12x220=2640MHz, kills FX-55
Custom w'cooling w/ '77 Pontiac B'ville h'core and 11.67 gpm pump, DD TDX waterblock, 2GB G. Skill @ DDR440
DeeperBlueServer:
Sempron 3100+, 512MB RAM, 6*250GB in RAID5 (1250GB capacity)


Top
 Profile  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Sun 03-21-2004 1:47AM 
Offline
Major
User avatar

Joined: Thu 09-04-2003 2:17PM
Posts: 392

Source: Off Campus
Lol sorry guys havent been on in long. where to start.. ok so do you recomend thermal paste on the cpu even though there is already thermal compound on the heatsink? THe mobo is mounted on these little things that seperate the mobo from the case by atleats half an inch. No fireworks. um.. i guess thats it?


Top
 Profile  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Sun 03-21-2004 1:48AM 
Offline
Major
User avatar

Joined: Thu 09-04-2003 2:17PM
Posts: 392

Source: Off Campus
Yeah too little power can fry yoru stuff. ask some electronical engineer about that.


Top
 Profile  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Sun 03-21-2004 5:21AM 
Offline
Major
User avatar

Joined: Wed 03-06-2002 4:47PM
Posts: 388

Source: Fidelity
I thought about this lack of power being to blame, and since it is 5 am I came to the most basic solution. It is very possible that if the system does not have enough power the CPU fan might not spin up. I still think it is most likely you were not getting the HSF on correctly.


Top
 Profile E-mail  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
 Post subject:
PostPosted: Sun 03-21-2004 1:27PM 
Offline
Lieutenant General
User avatar

Joined: Fri 09-05-2003 10:24AM
Posts: 3593
Location: Oklahoma! Where the wind comes sweeping down the p l a i n s !

Source: Altman Hall
some diodes, transistors, and capacitors have a minimum voltage/amperage limit that must be reached before they continue to function properly. THi is why TV screens don't work when there is less than 100 volts running to them. Anyway, if a switch operated by a transistor on a circuit board is supposed to go when current in another circuit reaches a certain point, if that switch isn't getting enough power, it won't operate, and the other circuit could overheat, or cause damage to an IC for having current applied too long, or any number of other things, and ... well ... cause the burnup that mop is talking about. This is just a sample scenario, there are many others...

_________________
Ever get that feeling of deja vu?


Top
 Profile E-mail  
Report this post    Reply with quote  
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Forum locked This topic is locked, you cannot edit posts or make further replies.  [ 28 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2  Next

All times are UTC - 6 hours


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
Powered by phpBB © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007 phpBB Group