Ok so heres the deal.. I have a computer that is randomly freezing or powering off completely. The only way to turn it back on is to unplug the power, wait a few and plug it back in, then hitting the power button. If I never unplug it and plug it back in, the computer never turns back on. This problem started recently and I have tried almost everything I can think of to solve it. It almost always happens right when I turn on windows.. eventually though it always just randomly decides to die.Overheating? I have an NXZT Nemesis case with like 4 huge fans, and a huge Zalman fan over the top of my CPU Power supply issue? I have a 700w Epsilon power supply, and I went to Tigerdirect and bought a new $200 750w top of the line power supply to test if that was the issue (thinking it was).. still the same problemVirus or software issue? I wiped my hard drive completely and reinstalled windows, still same problemSpecsAthlon FX-60 dual coreXFX Nvidia 8800GTSAbit K8N Nforce 4 Motherboard2 gigs of OCZ Plated high performance RAMnot overclockedhelpppppppppppppppppppppppppp please
11/28/2007 10:01:32 PM
haven't you seen the commercials? if you don't know how to use a PC, you're supposed to get a mac now
11/28/2007 10:22:04 PM
Are you getting any blue screens?Since you ruled out the power supply, I'm thinking either RAM or, more likely, the motherboard.
11/28/2007 10:25:42 PM
no blue screensi was thinking it might be the motherboard as well, one thing that gives me worries is the fact that the gigantic 8800GTS sits right on top of the motherboards fan/chipset
11/28/2007 11:05:08 PM
11/28/2007 11:09:39 PM
Motherboard issue.The digital power controller probably borka'd or the cable leading to the switch is fried. Replace either/both.Buy a new motherboard.
11/29/2007 12:11:11 AM
700w PSU? What do you think you're operating? You could run everything inside of your case just fine on a 350w, although I wouldn't suggest anything less than a 450w out of principle.But ... 700w, and you thought you should test with a "top of the line" 750w? What's your experience level, exactly?
11/29/2007 7:03:05 AM
the solution to all your problems:don't build your own computer next time if you don't know what you're doing.
11/29/2007 7:26:20 AM
Good Advice Evan, did it take a long time to think of it?
11/29/2007 4:48:32 PM
It could also be failed thermal grease from the proc-> heat sink.Although typically it doesn't take a full power cycle to recover from overheating.
11/29/2007 4:59:34 PM
^Not likely, but I considered that ... still agree with SandSanta, replace your Mobo.
11/29/2007 5:20:29 PM