So I'm building a cheap system for a friend. Motherboard: Intel DG45IDProcessor: Q8400Memory: Adata DDR2 800 (2x2g)In trying to solve this, I've replaced the processor and memory with known-good components from another PC. These known good components ARE on the compatibility list of the motherboard.I hit the power button and everything powers up but monitor does not wake up. I try 2 known good power supplies (one 24 pin the other 20 pin) and they do not power up but for a fraction of a second and then shut off. I get to looking at what is the difference in my PSU's and realize that my original PSU is set on 230V. I change it to 115V and then it behaves exactly like the 2 known-good PSU's just powering the fans for an instant and going off. There is no case short (it's assembled on antistatic bags on my floor now.) Did I fry the mobo with the PSU set to 230V? And oh yea, this is the 2nd mobo that's behaved like this as I RMA'd the first without discovering the 230V switch.
5/20/2011 9:53:15 AM
First, your antistatic bags are meant to house things properly, not prevent static while things are placed on them. I would use the Mobo cardboard box when post testing outside the case. Do you hear any post beeps? I would remove the ram and see if the board screams, to know if you fried the board or cpu.
5/20/2011 11:21:00 AM
ok it's in the box now...and no, there were never any beeps... the spu fan and psu fan only flash on for a fraction of a second. Mobo light remains lit entire time.
5/20/2011 2:17:28 PM
check your pin-outs for power/reset/ledscheck your seating of memorycheck the seating of all the power plugstry booting with cpu/motherboard/memory only, no peripherals, no hard drives.
5/20/2011 3:04:37 PM
I know a lot of boards come with a speaker, some don't. If you don't have a mobo speaker, you can get one for cheap, or bring it to a repair shop and ask to borrow one. If you have a micro center near you bring it there and they might help.
5/20/2011 10:44:38 PM
5/21/2011 9:38:16 AM
You said that you tried to boot with different and known working memory, CPU, and PSU. The process of elemination says the problem is the motherboard.Plugging a PSU set for 230V into a 110V socket is more likely to damage the PSU than the downstream components.
5/21/2011 10:20:58 AM
5/21/2011 11:36:47 AM
what everyone else said
5/21/2011 7:29:10 PM