could the power supply cause problems on my computer?

zimu

Diamond Member
Jun 15, 2001
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i was wondering whether the wattage of the power supply effects system performance at all. i just put in a new graphics card and every once in a while the system just randomly restarts, and i get the feeling it may be because of the lack of power.

its only an 145 watt power supply i think, came standard with my dell dimension. it is powering:
- 2 hdd's
- 1 fdd
- 1 48x burner
- tv tuner card
- radeon 9000
- ethernet card (nic)
- sound card

and all the usual motherboard etc. i've also put in a powerleap chip that upgrades my PPGA slot into an FCPGA-2 slot, so that uses some voltage i'm assuming, and it has a 1GHz celeron processor on it.

can anyone help me on this?

Thanks
 

MikeMike

Lifer
Feb 6, 2000
45,885
66
91
wow!!! 85watts!!

yeah get a new PS that is your problem. Get a 300w quality one, and you wont have to upgrade that PS for a LONG time at the rate your going
 

zimu

Diamond Member
Jun 15, 2001
6,209
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Originally posted by: nourdmrolNMT1
wow!!! 85watts!!

yeah get a new PS that is your problem. Get a 300w quality one, and you wont have to upgrade that PS for a LONG time at the rate your going

now the question is, are the power supply's all the same size? i.e. if i buy a new one, will it simply "fit" into my machine or i have to go into some detailed venture into its dimensions and compatability and motherboard voltages and whatever else?!
whats a good price for a PS?

thanks
 

MikeMike

Lifer
Feb 6, 2000
45,885
66
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now that you say it is a dell, your screwed, unless when you bought it, dell didnt use propietary connections on their mobos.

id call dell, and see what they would do

the connection from the ps to mobo is wired differently on their products
 
Jan 31, 2002
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Just check the inside. If you bought the system fairly recently, it should be a standard ATX+P4 PSU. A 300W will be great. :D

- M4H
 

dskaplan

Banned
Dec 31, 2002
79
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Yes, it's the power supply. No question about it. Get an Antec Truepower 430 as a replacement. If the psu connection to the m/b is proprietary, time to get a new computer : )
 

zimu

Diamond Member
Jun 15, 2001
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Originally posted by: dskaplan
Yes, it's the power supply. No question about it. Get an Antec Truepower 430 as a replacement. If the psu connection to the m/b is proprietary, time to get a new computer : )

what do you mean by "proprietary"

 

zimu

Diamond Member
Jun 15, 2001
6,209
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also, do you think it would allow me to increase my FSB speed more? currently i can only increase it to 74MHz before i get the blue screen of death or random restarts, although all my devices can definitely handle up to 133MHz.
 

snidy1

Golden Member
Mar 17, 2003
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Originally posted by: zimu
Originally posted by: dskaplan
Yes, it's the power supply. No question about it. Get an Antec Truepower 430 as a replacement. If the psu connection to the m/b is proprietary, time to get a new computer : )

what do you mean by "proprietary"

Dell has proprietary power supplies (Meaning they have there own nonstanderdised version) I think from 1995 to 2000. You can tell by looking at pin one, if it's red it's proprietary, if it's orange it's standardised. If it is proprietary you'll need to replace the motherboard and PS together or order a PS from Dell. Probably beter to just build a new system.
 

EglsFly

Senior member
Feb 21, 2001
461
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Dude... you got a Dell! :eek:

I heard that Dell puts in those "barely enough" power supplies.
I'd recommend upgrading it "if possible". Get an Enermax or Antec power supply.
Check the sticker for the amps rating on the 12v line. Higher the better.
 

nick1985

Lifer
Dec 29, 2002
27,153
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Originally posted by: EglsFly
Dude... you got a Dell! :eek:

I heard that Dell puts in those "barely enough" power supplies.
I'd recommend upgrading it "if possible". Get an Enermax or Antec power supply.
Check the sticker for the amps rating on the 12v line. Higher the better.