My system has been running fine for almost 2 years. I turned it back on after having it off for a month for winter break, and ever since, it sometimes shuts down when I'm away. It mostly happens overnight, but sometimes it happens when I walk away for a few hours. Either way, there doesn't seem to be any pattern. Windows XP doesn't prompt "The system was shut down unexpectedly..." or ask to do a disk check, so I can only assume it shut down properly...
The Windows power settings are set to never shut anything down, and none of the apps I run would shut it down either. I'm running ZoneAlarm and regularly do virus and spyware checks with no problems. I'm running off an APC UPS, and the system app says there have not been any power failures. I don't think anything has changed since before break. I did get a new mouse (MX 1000) but I doubt that could be it. My CPU is overclocked, but I've been running it like that for as long as I've had my PC. Is there anything I can do to figure out why it's shutting down?
Athlon XP 2500+ Barton (oc'ed to 3200+)
Gigabyte K7 Triton mobo
Thermaltake TT-420AD 420W PSU
1gig PC2700 DDR
Sapphire Radeon 9800SE
80gb SATA system drive
400gb PATA RAID
Windows XP
Any help would be appreciated!
(edit to include PSU)
The Windows power settings are set to never shut anything down, and none of the apps I run would shut it down either. I'm running ZoneAlarm and regularly do virus and spyware checks with no problems. I'm running off an APC UPS, and the system app says there have not been any power failures. I don't think anything has changed since before break. I did get a new mouse (MX 1000) but I doubt that could be it. My CPU is overclocked, but I've been running it like that for as long as I've had my PC. Is there anything I can do to figure out why it's shutting down?
Athlon XP 2500+ Barton (oc'ed to 3200+)
Gigabyte K7 Triton mobo
Thermaltake TT-420AD 420W PSU
1gig PC2700 DDR
Sapphire Radeon 9800SE
80gb SATA system drive
400gb PATA RAID
Windows XP
Any help would be appreciated!
(edit to include PSU)