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Solve : desktop needs a spanking? |
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Answer» Hi all, Cheers. Do you have any idea why any of those things would cause the problems described (other than reseating the RAM, which unfortunately hasn't helped)? I'd love to get to the root of it before I start replacing components... The CMOS battery runs the onboard clock when the power is off. Time loss is a very hefty pointer to trouble in that area. The power supply needs to provide clean stable power to the motherboard and disk drives. If it gets flaky you can get reluctant boot behaviour and erratic running. The cpu takes a heavy current and needs to be well connected via its socket which has over 100 pins. Anything shaky or loose is bad. HOWEVER, I note with a mixture of amusement and horror that you wrote "if I hit the computer hard enough..."! This in a post where you wonder why your computer is flaky!!! I would be tempted to take out the motherboard and examine it for cracks. I wonder if you appreciate how fragile computer components can be? desktop needs a spanking....Thanks. I live for these moments. Great new thread title............................. Hee hee. Well, I'm not a complete idiot - when I say 'hard enough' I mean hard enough to get it going, not hard enough to CRACK the motherboard! We're still talking single finger hitting, actually. I'm afraid the problems pre-date my admittedly less than tender ministrations anyway; although the problems have got worse, I had the boot-up problem the very first time I tried to turn it on. Actually, though, do you think a cracked motherboard could cause these problems? There obviously could be cracks I can't see. Thanks very much for the help. So, if you or anyone else doesn't know what MIGHT make a clock lose time both when the computer's on AND off (am I right in understanding that the CMOS battery affects the clock ONLY when the power's off?) then I suppose I should start with the power supply...or maybe I'm extra lucky and it's ALL those things... You should always consider economics.The CMOS battery is the least expensive fix. Start there. Quote from: brando on October 23, 2007, 05:07:39 PM Actually, though, do you think a cracked motherboard could cause these problems? There obviously could be cracks I can't see. It's not impossible; if it's a no-name Chinese cheapo it might even have been made that way. The fact that the problem is so deeply FUNDAMENTAL and you've dismantled everything & rebuilt it again makes me suspect the motherboard and/or chipset. Your power supply is bad get a new one thats the only solution. Quote from: tommy gusack on October 24, 2007, 10:32:11 AM Your power supply is bad get a new one thats the only solution. Tommy, that's what I am thinking myself now. |
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