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Solve : Does Sleep Mode for Vista result in HDD/Mobo failure?? |
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Answer» In conclusion, this was definitely entertaining, and an extra bonus was that Gamer11705 will, if he can be bothered to wade through the corrections and subsequent irrelevant rebuttals containing nothing of value to find a few tidbits of useful info, much better. Dude that makes no sense on so many levels... so it's the quality of power and not output of power? I never meant that. A proper correction would be that the amount of power won't matter if the quality is crap. [/quote] Quote unless the guy has miniscule wires connecting from the psu to motherboard or barely connecting or something that's just not going to be the case.Not sure what wire size has to do with anything. I'm not talking about RF interference with the power input but rather fluctuations caused by failed components. As an example, my old PC still works fine, but the power supply has issues. This has caused bad sectors and random freezing. I know it's the power supply, because I can swap in my other PCs power supply and it can run for days without showing the symptoms. This is something called "EXPERIENCE". I changed nothing but the PSU, and the problems dissapeared! Why, if there was a problem with the old PSU then it shouldn't have worked at all, but it did. Quote Even if what you're explaining could happen which I've never heard of or expereinced myself the chances of it happening are rare but so far I've seen about 30 pages like this saying the exact same thing. psu's are just a bunch of capacitors voltage regulators, resistors, diodes a transformer and most importantly a fuse, they're not that difficult however there are a bunch of failsafes in place so that if this fails then everything does...yes. PSU's consist of a number of components. Components can fail, or have problems. for example, capacitors can acquire wear and tear, and their capacitance can be affected. One possible result might be that the POWER_GOOD signal is sent out to early; or perhaps a Rail is given too much amperage for it's load. regarding the POWER_GOOD signal: From: "Upgrading and Repairing PCs, 15th Edition", I'm sure you'll dispute it anyway. Quote In addition to supplying electrical power to run the system, the power supply also ensures that the system does not run unless the voltages supplied are sufficient to OPERATE the system properly. In other words, the power supply actually prevents the computer from starting up or operating until all the power supply voltages are within the proper ranges. In short? if the circuitry controlling POWER_GOOD is either damaged or composed of cheap components (or simply neglected, some power supplies simply tie the +5 rail to the POWER_GOOD and call it a day) then the delivered currents can easily be out of range. Quote The only instance a computer would not boot but allow the fans and lights to COME on would be a power supply that cannot supply enough wattage to power the machine so if the computer needs 300 watts and the psu supplies only 200. I read this as "I don't understand the concept behind the POWER_GOOD signal". woops. I declared troll and then went so far as to respond. oh well. this thread certainly turned took an alternate route Agreed, Block.so maybe we get back on route LOL Who took the detour Quote from: 2x3i5x on May 24, 2009, 06:40:06 PM
heh, not sure, but I believe the detour began when ghaldos and BC_programmer started duking is out It happens, personally I think occasional tangents make forums more interestingOmigosh what happened to the thread lol.I would like to thank all the replies to this thread, but thank's to Blockhead's suggestion of just simply removing and putting back the CMOS fixed it up nice and dandy. |
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