Did I Fry My CPU?

Oct 23, 2005
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http://img346.imageshack.us/img346/4862/photo00251hy.jpg

Sorry for the picture quality, it was taken with the camera on my cell phone which is pretty crappy.

Anyway, I have a machine that won't boot. I press the power button, the power supply spins, the case fan spins, the CPU fan spins, but no signs of life. So I started taking components out until I had just the motherboard left. Still nothing. That was when I realized there was that brown mark on the underside of the CPU. Given the mark and the symptoms, would you say I had a bad mobo or a bad CPU or both?
 
Oct 23, 2005
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Originally posted by: JSFLY
how did this happen?

Not sure. I wasn't working inside the machine. It was a server with no peripherals that I was having trouble ssh'ing into. So I put a keyboard,monitor and mouse in it and checked out the networking settings, tweaked the resolution and was trying to download some new YAST packages. Then is basically just froze. I manually reset it a few times, couldn't get anything to came up and then gave up on it until now.
 

F1shF4t

Golden Member
Oct 18, 2005
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Originally posted by: Corporate Thug
Originally posted by: JPH1121
That's gotta be a Prescott :p

looks like an athlon

Well the only difference between athlon Xp and prescott, besides crap performance and running hot is the prescot wont melt itself, while the athlon will.
 

jiffylube1024

Diamond Member
Feb 17, 2002
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It's probably an Athlon classic, which had no motherboard temperature shutdown. Or a palomino with improper mobo support.
 

F1shF4t

Golden Member
Oct 18, 2005
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Originally posted by: jiffylube1024
It's probably an Athlon classic, which had no motherboard temperature shutdown. Or a palomino with improper mobo support.

Actually funny u mention that, i have a polomino, and mounted the heatsink wrong on it the other day, only made half contact and the mainboard actually saved the cpu, its still alive and kicking. Board is MSI k7n2, really good board except for the dead battery :p
 
Oct 23, 2005
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I believe it was an Athlon XP 2600 (Thoroughbred Core) running in an A7V8X mobo. When I took it apart, I did notice a substantial amount of dust collected between the heatsink and CPU fan, but I'm still surprised the alarm/auto-shutdown didn't save it.
 

Check

Senior member
Nov 6, 2000
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You haven't seen the infamous THG video have you? I'm not suprised when any of the older AMD processors go up in flames.
 

WhoBeDaPlaya

Diamond Member
Sep 15, 2000
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Dead. Seen way too many burnt out Athlon/Duron CPUs over the last ~5 years.
(Burnt out about 2 of my own - blame it on carelessness during HSF reviews :p )
 

robertk2012

Platinum Member
Dec 14, 2004
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Originally posted by: WhoBeDaPlaya
Dead. Seen way too many burnt out Athlon/Duron CPUs over the last ~5 years.
(Burnt out about 2 of my own - blame it on carelessness during HSF reviews :p )

Guess all that voltage that people say doesnt matter is catching up with the cpus
 

Amaroque

Platinum Member
Jan 2, 2005
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Originally posted by: robertk2012
Originally posted by: WhoBeDaPlaya
Dead. Seen way too many burnt out Athlon/Duron CPUs over the last ~5 years.
(Burnt out about 2 of my own - blame it on carelessness during HSF reviews :p )

Guess all that voltage that people say doesnt matter is catching up with the cpus

That's why I don't overvolt my CPU's anymore (killed/degraded several throughout the years). ;)

Even with thermal protection & better cooling, the increased voltage is killing our CPU's.