- Jun 30, 2004
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I think my spring panic of troubleshooting is at an end. It started here, and I can see the thread I initiated is still up at the top of the "recent" page.
It then moved to RAM, then motherboards, then CPUs. It all started with a vaping-pen/static-charge on a USB port more than a year ago. Motherboard definitely needed replacement, and I obtained two -- eventually swapping in the RMA replacement early this month/late last month. I'd replaced the PSU, the RAM, the motherboard, the graphics card -- lucky I have spares of everything.
I think I've resolved the random power events, although a bit early to tell. But a "Ten Forum" thread by a guy complaining about his kid putting games on his shared system had identical symptoms to mine -- not just similar but identical in every way. His problem wasn't Win 10; it was damaged or bad cabling to the PSU.
I'm not 100% sure which cable was my problem. I didn't want to screw around, and replaced all the power cables and the PSU as well. The 24-pin motherboard cable had been twisted and stressed for "cable management". Another SATA power cable was also twisted into a pretzel. In the process of following the opportunity to do a big makeover of cabling in my case, I discovered one SATA power cable was not fully locked into the modular PSU. But that cable had been thrown in the mix just to anticipate additions of hardware, and wasn't even connected to any drives.
Is it possible that a loosely connected SATA power cable without drive connections could create my random power events? Like I said, I replaced all of the cables, and I don't know if that particular cable was the cause of my problem. But I was stunned to find that cable not fully locked into the Seasonic.
I could write a list of do's and don'ts for installing and maintaining a "modular" power supply.
Anyway, crossing my fingers that this resolved all my troubles, but it all looks pretty good and I'm confident.
MORAL OF THE STORY: You can damage your computer to require replacing the motherboard. It is an opportunity to do sloppy work, and cause additional problems. And if you're troubleshooting hardware, don't forget the freaking power cables! If you're going to replace the PSU, don't use the old cables, even if two Seasonic Titaniums use the very same cables.
It then moved to RAM, then motherboards, then CPUs. It all started with a vaping-pen/static-charge on a USB port more than a year ago. Motherboard definitely needed replacement, and I obtained two -- eventually swapping in the RMA replacement early this month/late last month. I'd replaced the PSU, the RAM, the motherboard, the graphics card -- lucky I have spares of everything.
I think I've resolved the random power events, although a bit early to tell. But a "Ten Forum" thread by a guy complaining about his kid putting games on his shared system had identical symptoms to mine -- not just similar but identical in every way. His problem wasn't Win 10; it was damaged or bad cabling to the PSU.
I'm not 100% sure which cable was my problem. I didn't want to screw around, and replaced all the power cables and the PSU as well. The 24-pin motherboard cable had been twisted and stressed for "cable management". Another SATA power cable was also twisted into a pretzel. In the process of following the opportunity to do a big makeover of cabling in my case, I discovered one SATA power cable was not fully locked into the modular PSU. But that cable had been thrown in the mix just to anticipate additions of hardware, and wasn't even connected to any drives.
Is it possible that a loosely connected SATA power cable without drive connections could create my random power events? Like I said, I replaced all of the cables, and I don't know if that particular cable was the cause of my problem. But I was stunned to find that cable not fully locked into the Seasonic.
I could write a list of do's and don'ts for installing and maintaining a "modular" power supply.
Anyway, crossing my fingers that this resolved all my troubles, but it all looks pretty good and I'm confident.
MORAL OF THE STORY: You can damage your computer to require replacing the motherboard. It is an opportunity to do sloppy work, and cause additional problems. And if you're troubleshooting hardware, don't forget the freaking power cables! If you're going to replace the PSU, don't use the old cables, even if two Seasonic Titaniums use the very same cables.