AlexBohner <alexbohner@yahoo.com> wrote
> I have run into a problem which I just can't figure out,
> hopefully someone out there has an easy answer for me.
> Several months ago I built an ABit/Sempron system, everything
> was working fine until last night when I pulled a 1394 PCI card
> from the last slot on the board, now it won't power on. Correction,
> when I attempt to power on the fans start spinning for a fraction
> of a second, then everything just shuts off.
Such a short run of the fans usually means that the power
supply is seeing a load it doesnt like when it starts.
> Immediately pressing the power button again does nothing,
Because the power supply has decided that its seeing an unacceptible load.
> but resetting the power on the power supply allows me
> to press the front power again, but with the same results.
> I have reseated everything in the box, cleared the CMOS,
> even tried reinserting the 1394 card, all to no avail. Does
> anyone have any idea what may be happening here?
The three main possibilitys are that you have removed something
in the process of getting the 1394 card out and didnt replace it
where it was originally, you've got a short to case now that was
produced by the process of removing the 1394 card, and that the
power supply or motherboard has just chosen to fail now and that
the 1394 card removal is a coincidence.
If you didnt do anything except remove the 1394 card, didnt
unplug anything so you could remove it, a short is most likely.
You sure you didnt drop a screw from the 1394 card bracket
and didnt bother to try to get it out etc ? If you cant easily try
a different power supply, it would be worth running the
motherboard loose on the desktop. Thats the best test of a short
to case and you might find a loose screw in the process that has
been there all this time and got moved by the 1394 card removal etc.
If running it loose on the desktop doesnt help, try unplugging
everything you can from the motherboard excep the cpu.
See if it will power up in that state and beep complaining
about the lack of ram etc.
If that doesnt help, it would be best to try another power supply
even if you have to buy one if there is no evidence of bad caps
on the motherboard. The caps are the usually blue or black
plastic covered post like things that stick up vertically from
the motherboard surface. The tops should be flat and if any have
bulged or have leaked, thats a bad cap and likely the problem.
Its very unlikely to be a dead cpu if you havent overclocked it
and even then, that usually doesnt produce those symptoms.
> Any thoughts or suggestions to point me in
> the right direction will be greatly appreciated.
> Machine Specs:
> ABIT NF8-v2 Motherboard
> AMD Sempron 64 3400+ Palermo 2.0GHz
> 2x 1GB OCZ PC3200 Platinum Edition RAM (2 GB total)
> Radeon 9800 SE 128MB Video Card
> 100GB Seagate 7200rpm PATA Hard Disk
> Thermaltake TR2-430W Power Supply