| 1. |
Solve : P6X58D-E Motherboard damaged by CPU installation??? |
|
Answer» Hi all I'm also not sure about a replacement MB. Any thoughts? Personally i would try a CPU swap before i would chalk it to to a bad board...but's that's just ne...Whatn they're saying is that the socket has bent pins. Do they have any evidence of this? Ask for a picture, they should be happy to provide one. Did you inspect the socket before sending it back? Do you actually have the board with you now, or do Newegg still have it? Quote from: skyeclipper on July 16, 2010, 08:59:35 PM ...Well...a magnifying glass inspection showed that the CPU pad array had no mechanical damage...I don't know where to go from here. Do you think I could turn Newegg around?...Why did you send the motherboard back? Did you see it was broken? Tell us exactly what happened that caused you to return it. Did it not POST?First things first things first: I do not have anger management issues, so I did not take a hammer to the motherboard. When I first started putting this PC together: Installed the PSU Installed the CPU on the ASUS P6X58D-E MB Installed the motherboard in the case Mated the HSF to the CPU Installed 3 x2GB memory sticks Installed the ATI 5770 video card Turned the machine on This first smoke test yielded little. The MEM-OK LED came on. The I/O button lighted. The HSF spun up as did the video card fan. I played around the with memory sticks trying to isolate a "defective" stick. Nada. The board would not even try to POST. I subsequently obtained a speaker to help with troubleshooting. With a speaker, I powered up the machine now expecting to hear some beeps. No joy. It had to be the MB, the CPU or the memory. Based on what I had to work with, I decided that it was a defective motherboard and RMA'd it back to Egghead. Do you think that ASUS might help under these circumstances? Do I need to rate the experience a single egg on Newegg.com to get ASUS attention? Thanks for the help guys. You are helping to keep me sane. Too late to ask Newegg for pictures, the motherboard is now in transit from Newegg. I will check it with a magnifying glass. Thanks Quote from: skyeclipper on July 17, 2010, 08:19:17 PM Too late to ask Newegg for pictures, the motherboard is now in transit from Newegg. I will check it with a magnifying glass...They said: "Motherboard was received with apparent end-user caused physical damage to CPU socket contact pins." Should not require a magnifying glass; they didn't use one. If you didn't ship it back with the protective cover in place, it may have caused them to make this determination. When you get it back, inspect it & let us know what you see.I did in fact have the protective cover on the socket. I did not notice any anomalies after removing the CPU, prior to putting the socket cover on for shipping. I will post my comments after I examine the motherboard. ThanksHow To Install/Remove Intel Socket 1366 CPU and Heatsink Quote from: Geek-9pm on July 18, 2010, 03:50:48 PM How To Install/Remove Intel Socket 1366 CPU and Heatsink Too late... Quote from: patio on July 18, 2010, 06:26:14 PM Too late...Probably. Read the whole thing, If you squashed it flat (which I now suspect), you're SOL. "If a pin is out of place it may be possible to very carefully nudge it back into place with the tip of a sharp pin. " Fudge. The MB is on it's way back to me. I'll post a photo of the damage later this WEEK. |
|