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Subject:
From:
"Hachmeyer, Mr. Paul S." <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Personal Computer Hardware discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 2 May 2009 15:24:07 -0400
Content-Type:
text/plain
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text/plain (121 lines)
Using brass standoffs is a good thing, however, brass is an electrical conductor.  It's important that the screw heads are not touching any part of the conductors on the printed circuit board and the same for the brass standoffs on the bottom of the circuit board,  Either can result in a short.   Shoud be a fiber or plastic washer between the screw and mb or the standoff and mb, if possible.  See my previous email about removing components.
Paul Hachmeyer  
________________________________________
From: Personal Computer Hardware discussion List [[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Vanessa H. [[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Saturday, May 02, 2009 9:56 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [PCBUILD] Newly Rebuilt PC turns off.

Sorry for leaving out the specs. I have a 400w power supply, an ECS
GeForce6100PM-M2 mobo with nVidia chipset, AMD Athlon 64 X2 5600+ processor
boxed with heatsink and fan 2GB Crucial DDR2 PC6400 memory. All of these
items are brand new. The only reused items are the Seagate 200GB hard drive
and the generic ATX case. Now to answer your questions, I did not put any
thermal compound on the processor because it came with some already on it.
The motherboard was used for about 2 hours in a different computer that I
built a month ago, but I decided to use a BioStar board.  As far as nVidia
boards, 3 other computers in my home have ECS boards with nVidia and have
been running just fine. I did use brass stand offs where ever I have a
screw. I'm using onboard video for now.  So I will try booting up without
the memory as you suggested.  Another friend suggested booting up without
the hard drive? I'm willing to try anything right now.

Thanks again,
Vanessa H.

-----Original Message-----
From: Personal Computer Hardware discussion List
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Dean Kukral
Sent: Saturday, May 02, 2009 9:04 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [PCBUILD] Newly Rebuilt PC turns off.

Vanessa, when you ask a hardware question, you should always tell us what
hardware you are using!

I have had two motherboards do the same thing, an ASUS and an EVGA.  Both
used the NVIDIA chipset.  They would start, usually, if I
turned the power off at the power supply and let them sit for several hours.
Sometimes the ASUS would not.  I got fed up with the
ASUS and replaced it with the EVGA.  The new one will always start after
several hours of resting.  If you are also using an NVIDIA
chipset, you may share my problem.  (I will never buy another motherboard
with an NVIDIA chipset.)  This work-around is a minor
inconvenience.

Another possibility is that your cpu is overheating.  Did you do a good job
of placing a thin layer of heat-sink compound on the
cpu?  I have built a good many computers over the years, and, still, on the
last computer that I built, I did not get the compound
on properly (maybe I am getting too old to build computers?) and it shut
down.  However, I don't think that it shut down quite so
fast.

You may have a short.  The likely culprit is on the bottom of the
motherboard.  Check the clearances between the mb and the case.
Your brass stand-offs **should**  keep it from shorting.

Is your power supply up to the job?  Since we know nothing of your hardware,
it is difficult to comment.

Try disconnecting all the accessories except memory  and video card and see
if you can boot to the cmos settings.

Dean Kukral


----- Original Message -----
From: Vanessa H.
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Saturday, May 02, 2009 7:32 AM
Subject: [PCBUILD] Newly Rebuilt PC turns off.


Hello all,

                I need a little help. I have built 5 PC's in the last 8
years and do minor repairs for friends, so I'm not a complete novice.  But
recently my son's PC would not turn on.  I decided it must either be the
power supply or the motherboard.  The first thing I replaced was the power
supply because it was the least expensive.  Well, that did nothing.  With
the new power supply in place, the PC was still completely dead.  I then
purchased a new motherboard, processor and ram.  After getting everything in
place, the PC turns on only briefly.  I mean it literally only runs for
about 5 seconds.  All the fans come on and it looks like it's about to start
up, but it turns off.  I tried unplugging all the wiring and starting from
scratch, but I still only get about 5 seconds before it all goes dead.  It
seems as though something is shorting out, but I don't know what?  Please
help!



Kind regards,

Vanessa H

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              with the PCBUILD logo...  at a great price!!!
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              with the PCBUILD logo...  at a great price!!!
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