No POST, no... nothing. Please Help!

Evenkeel

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Sep 3, 2004
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I originally thought this was just a PSU problem, so I posted part of the following on the Power Supply forum. Then during my "involuntary work stoppage", I read several pages of threads on this forum, and think this might be the more appropriate place for troubleshooting the problem. I don't mean to intentionally cross-post.

Original post on PSU forum:
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Here's the situation:

I just finished assembling my build last night. I used a PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750 Quad. Motherboard is Intel DX38BT, CPU is Intel QX9650. Other components connected at the time were one SATA II Seagate 750 GB HD, and one Samsung SATA DVD burner.

I connected up all the connectors: the three to the motherboard (big 24-pin, 8-pin CPU, and 4-pin molex for the PCI bus), one SATA power each to the HD and the burner. All case headers were connected (power switch, HD LED, etc.).

My current system, w/a 510watt PSU, is plugged into an APC RS1200 (1200 watt) Back-UPS. I unplugged it, plugged in the new system w/the PC Power 750watt PSU, and flipped the switch.

Immediately, my APC Back-UPS started screeching, and the "Overload" light lit up. I shut off the new system, quadruple-checked all my connections, and tried again. This time, nothing. No "overload" warning, no nothing.

The first time I started, as best I can recall (having been distracted by the Back-UPS alarm) no fans or HD activity was present even for that short period. The second time, definitely not.

I really dug in and started checking conections, and making sure the graphics card and RAM were seated. Everything checked out. Every connection was where it was supposed to be.

I went to PC Power's site, and they have this troubleshooting advice. I followed each step to the letter, including step #6: shorting between the green and black wires on the 24-pin connector. The PSU fan did not come on.

This seems to indicate a bad PSU. But there are two odd things I want to note: one, when the connectors were still plugged into the motherboard, the tiny green LED next to the 24-pin mobo connector was lit up when the PSU was turned on. Two, when I pressed the power switch on the computer case, the power-on LED blinked on and off, rather than coming on steadily.

So can a PSU be bad, and still supply some power? Enough to light up the 24-pin mobo LED, and make the power switch blink? And what does the power switch LED blinking indicate? (I'm sure it means something; I just don't know what.)

I had originally planned to order the PSU directly from PC Power, like I did last time. But they now have resellers listed on their web site, and one was Amazon, which is where I ordered from. It cost less, and no tax plus free two-day shipping. But it came in a huge box, w/hardly any packing, and now I wonder if it got bumped around so much that it ruined the PSU? Hard to believe; PC Power builds like a tank, but possible, I suppose.

I know most of you experienced guys have gone thru this--putting it all together and flipping the switch, only to discover some part was DOA. This is my first time, and I am crushed. But if it has to be one part, I'd rather it be the PSU, than the motherboard. Can you guys give me some guidance as to if it is indeed the PSU that is dead? (Make sure to read the troubleshooting steps I followed on PC Power's site, so you know what I did to test.) And if it is the PSU, I am sending it back to Amazon and ordering direct from PC Power this time--they actually know how to pack an electronic component.
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Okay, that was the original post on the PSU forum. I think I've fallen prey to "sophomore syndrome"--"sophomore", in the sense that this is my second build, and the first build went off w/out a hitch. IOW, I thought I knew what I was doing. First mistake.

I'm going to tell you guys every remotely stupid thing I can think of that I did, so you can help me troubleshoot. I've read several pages of threads in this forum, paying special attention to those that cry out "No POST!", and some of the situations sound similar, tho not the same.

I'm now thinking I have a short. But I don't know where. If you followed the link in the above part of the post, to PC Power's troubleshooting page, you'll see that I did the "shorting across the green and black wire" step. I gather from the wiring diagram that this is supposed to force the PSU to turn on, but the step also says to hook up two high-capacity hard drives, presumably to load the minimum one amp the PSU needs to turn on. I still have to check the specs on the two Seagate HDs I used for this--mistake #2--to make sure they add up to one amp load.

I'm thinking I should pull everything out of the case and bench-test--which is what I should have done in the first place. Mistake #3. Questions on that:

1) I've seen posts that say, when bench-testing, to place the motherboard on the anti-static bag it came in. But then I've also seen at least one post that said, no, the bag is only to dissipate a charge, and if you put a powered mobo on it, it will actually conduct electricity across the solder points and traces, and to put the mobo on a piece of cardboard. So which is it: bench-test the mobo on top of the anti-static bag, or on a piece of cardboard?

2) I thought the first best way to uncover the short (other than removing the mobo from the case), would be to take out the graphics card and the RAM sticks. From the postings I've read here, the mobo will still start (assuming it's not dead), it will just start beeping that there's no RAM. But at least I'll know if it even CAN start. Is this the correct way to go? But I should leave in the CPU and its HSF, right?

3) Trying #1 and #2 may be moot--is my PSU dead? (BTW, I did plug my old system back into the APC Back-UPS, and it works fine, so the Back-UPS breaker did not trip from the original overload.) I know it could be that the "shorting" trick to get it to come on may not have worked, because the two SATA HDs I used may not have tried to pull enough power. Will it hurt anything at this point to pull out the mobo and the possibly-dead PSU, and try bench-testing them?

Okay, time to 'fess up mistake #4: when I was first installing the mobo in the Lian-li PC-V200Bplus case I bought, and was trying to figure out where to position the stand-offs, I held the board by the Northbridge HS as a handle (mistake #4a), and tried to hover the board over the motherboard compartment in the Lian-li case, as I used a Sharpie to mark thru the mobo mounting holes, down thru to the screw holes in the case. It's possible that at some point during this process, the mobo tipped and its underside came into contact w/the case metal (mistake #4b).

Now I know I sound like a complete idiot, and probably I am. But I WAS wearing an electrostatic wrist strap the entire time, and also constantly touched both the new case, as well as my old system's case, which was plugged in and running at the time. I was especially carefull to do this right before any crucial action--like marking the mobo holes. The case itself was laying on a 100% cotton towel--no acrylic content--on top of a small table (actually my dog's grooming table) which is rubber-topped, and has thick rubber caps on the bottom of the legs.

Still... from all the posts that I read here, and the fact that my APC should easily have been able to handle the wattage requirements of the new system--does this sound like a short? If so, where should I start looking?

Is the PSU dead, or is it in some overload protection state that it will come out of as soon as it gets the right load, without a short? If it is dead, will it hurt the mobo trying to bench-test w/it?

And if the motherboard is dead, how do I actually tell? Is the only way to do it, is start replacing parts to eliminate suspects? Like replace PSU, then bench-test stripped mobo? If something shorted, how likely is it that it made it all the way to the CPU? I'm praying you say "not likely", because that QX9650 cost almost $1100. This would be an expensive lesson.

Before I do any of that, while the motherboard is still in the case, where is the short likely to be? I ask this so I can visually inspect those spots before I pull the mobo, to see if I can find anything? In thinking about it, the I/O shield struck me as seeming kind of odd--nothing I can put my finger on, just that it seems to have more of those little "fingers" than I recall the old one having. BTW, I did make sure that the big "finger" did NOT dive down into the LAN port, but is riding on top of it, inside the case.

I know this has been overly long, but I'm trying to cover all the points I can think of to help you guys help me sort this out. I also know that you experienced guys have probably at one time or another, experienced the sinking sensation of throwing a switch on a new build for the first time, and having nothing happen. Please help me figure out what I did wrong. Thank you.
 

Fardringle

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I may have missed it somewhere in the post, but did you try turning the computer on while NOT connected to the UPS? The fact that the UPS was screeching as soon as you connected the new computer would seem to indicate that either the PSU in the new system did something rude to the UPS (possible but not likely) or the new system is trying to draw more power than the UPS can provide.

If the system still won't POST when connected directly to a wall outlet or standard surge protector, remove the motherboard from the case, reconnect the power supply to the motherboard with the board on a non-conductive, non-static surface (the cardboard box the motherboard came in will work nicely - do not use the outside of the anti-static bag) and see if it will post that way. If it does, then you have a short between the motherboard and the case and you need to figure out where a standoff is missing or if you have an extra that is touching the back of the motherboard at a point where there is no mounting screw.
 

robisbell

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Oct 27, 2007
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1. use the box the mobo came in.

2. if the mobo has shorted and fried, then it'll do nothing if the video or ram is removed.

you probably put a standoff in the wrong spot, test the mobo, bar bones outside of the case. it's probably already dead tho, so, I'd go ahead and look up the procedure to RMA the mobo back to the manufacturer.
 

Narse

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Take your mobo, one stick of ram and your vid card and power it up outside your case. If you are certain the PS is good than its most likely the MB.
 

jackschmittusa

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While the mb is out of the case, inspect it for burn marks and cracks. These are usually seen on the back. Look at the power components on the mb near the cpu.

Green light on mb should indicate 5v standby power, but nothing else about the psu.

Once upon a time, everyone advised that there be a load on the psu when testing it. Several years ago, the consensus seemed to be that a load was unnecessary for short time testing. One of the psu testers that I have has a load built into it, the other is too light to have a wire-wound resister in it. Both work. I have done the green/black short test several times without a problem. It is possible that the manufacturer did design the psu to require a load to start or or it may tell you to use one as an extra precaution against damaging the psu if you were to leave it on for too long in a no-load state. I don't know which.

Did the breaker trip on the ups?
 

Evenkeel

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Originally posted by: Fardringle
I may have missed it somewhere in the post, but did you try turning the computer on while NOT connected to the UPS? The fact that the UPS was screeching as soon as you connected the new computer would seem to indicate that either the PSU in the new system did something rude to the UPS (possible but not likely) or the new system is trying to draw more power than the UPS can provide.

If the system still won't POST when connected directly to a wall outlet or standard surge protector, remove the motherboard from the case, reconnect the power supply to the motherboard with the board on a non-conductive, non-static surface (the cardboard box the motherboard came in will work nicely - do not use the outside of the anti-static bag) and see if it will post that way. If it does, then you have a short between the motherboard and the case and you need to figure out where a standoff is missing or if you have an extra that is touching the back of the motherboard at a point where there is no mounting screw.

"I may have missed it somewhere in the post, but did you try turning the computer on while NOT connected to the UPS?"

Yes, several times--as per the troubleshooting instructions on the PC Power link I listed in my (very long) OP.
 

Evenkeel

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Originally posted by: jackschmittusa
While the mb is out of the case, inspect it for burn marks and cracks. These are usually seen on the back. Look at the power components on the mb near the cpu.

Green light on mb should indicate 5v standby power, but nothing else about the psu.

Once upon a time, everyone advised that there be a load on the psu when testing it. Several years ago, the consensus seemed to be that a load was unnecessary for short time testing. One of the psu testers that I have has a load built into it, the other is too light to have a wire-wound resister in it. Both work. I have done the green/black short test several times without a problem. It is possible that the manufacturer did design the psu to require a load to start or or it may tell you to use one as an extra precaution against damaging the psu if you were to leave it on for too long in a no-load state. I don't know which.

Did the breaker trip on the ups?

No, believe it or not, the breaker did not trip on the UPS. I poked at the breaker reset button, but it was not tripped, and right after plugged my old system back in--the old system started immediately, and runs just fine.

Also, after the initial UPS alarm on the new system first startup attempt, I tried plugging it again into the UPS, a few more times. All the times after the first trime (when the alarm went off), I got nothing.

Which would be more likely to indicate to you: a dead PSU, or a dead mobo?

And is the only way to tell if it's the PSU or the mobo, is to get another PSU and try it?

I have an amp/volt meter. The DC volts part of it has scales in 200 volts, 2 volts, and 200m (milli?) volts. Can I use it to test the mobo connectors of the PSU, and see if they are putting out? Which ones should I test? Obviously, if that 5v standby is still working, that's not pertinent to the main problem. Should I only test the 12v outputs? And should I ground the black test lead to the black wires in the 24-pin connector, or to the case?
 

robisbell

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Oct 27, 2007
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no, all you need is to jumper the 20/24 pin power to make the psu think you're booting up the pc. I'd totally disconnect the psu from everything and try to test the psu again.
 

Evenkeel

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Originally posted by: robisbell
no, all you need is to jumper the 20/24 pin power to make the psu think you're booting up the pc. I'd totally disconnect the psu from everything and try to test the psu again.

Do you mean Step #6 on this troubleshooting guide?

If so, I already tried that. If not, could you please explain exactly what pins to jumper? The wiring diagram for the Silencer 750 is here.
 

Evenkeel

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Okay, I've now bench-tested the motherboard, and got nothing.

Here are the steps I took:

-Before removing the motherboard, I got a very bright utility light, and examined every part of the motherboard, to see if any part of it was in contact w/the case where it should not have been. It all looked good--no visible shorts.

-Removed motherboard from case. Counted standoffs five times. Came up with 10 standoffs, with 10 screws, that went thru the 10 mounting holes on the motherboard. No extra screws, no extra standoffs. All mounting holes lined up w/all standoffs. Nothing foreign beneath the motherboard.

-Examined bottom of motherboard. No apparent burned areas, and nothing smelled burned.

-Put motherboard in cardboard box that it came in, NOT on top of antistatic bag. Removed and reseated both RAM sticks, and graphics card. Connected 24-pin main, 8-pin CPU, and 4-pin molex, plus 6-pin PCIe to graphics card.

-Powered up. Nothing.

-Removed graphics card. Tried again. Nothing.

-Figured either or both PSU and mobo were dead, at this point. Removed the huge HSF from the top of the QX9650 (fan obscures a significant portion of the board around the CPU, due to its large size), to examine area around CPU. No apparent burned areas, nor burnt smell. NOTE: even tho board never powered up, HSF conducting material (i.e. Intel's version of "Arctic Silver") had melted from its pre-install neat little geometric shapes, into a film that covered the CPU surface. How could it do this if nothing ever started? Doesn't it take heat to melt that conductant? What is that telling us? And BTW, the conductant is NOT burned; it still has its silvery color.

-I removed the CPU to examine its underside. No apparent burned areas, nor burnt smell. Does this mean the CPU is probably okay? (Please, oh please, say "yes".) I replaced the CPU in its socket, but left the HSF off--I will need to scrape off the old conductant, and put on some new, won't I? What is everyone using now?

Okay, so where does this leave me? Even tho I made some questionable moves during install, and tried to be brutally honest w/you guys about it, is it not entirely possible that one of the two main components under scrutiny--the PSU or the mobo--came to me defective? (I think I read somewhere here on this forum last night that something like 45% of non-OEM motherboards arrive DOA--OEM boards having a lower failure rate due to over-engineering so the Dells and HPs don't have so many warranty returns.) I mean, I kow I over-analyzed every move I made during the install, but is it not possible that I did NOT make a fatal mistake?

Should I order a new PSU, and try it on the current motherboard? Or if there is something internally wrong w/this motherboard, might it not short and fry the new PSU as well? Is my best bet to just RMA both the PSU and the motherboard, at this point?

Also, it is unlikely that the RAM, the graphics card, or the hard drive caused any of this, isn't it?

And again, from my description, does it sound like the CPU is okay?

Anyway, the clock is ticking on return time, so what should I do--just go ahead and RMA both PSU and motherboard?
 

robisbell

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okay, what happened when you jumpered #16 with any of the following numbers 15, 17, 18, 19?

http://forums.extremeoverclock...howthread.php?t=118964

the PCP&C post is very concise, I'd like to know if the PSU powered up at all, you made sure nothing was connected like HDD, opttical drives, mobo, video card, correct? this was not plugged into the APC, correct, when you tried it?
 

Evenkeel

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Originally posted by: robisbell
okay, what happened when you jumpered #16 with any of the following numbers 15, 17, 18, 19?

http://forums.extremeoverclock...howthread.php?t=118964

the PCP&C post is very concise, I'd like to know if the PSU powered up at all, you made sure nothing was connected like HDD, opttical drives, mobo, video card, correct? this was not plugged into the APC, correct, when you tried it?

Nothing happened at all--nothing on the motherboard, not even the PSU fan came on. The first time I tried it, I followed the PCP&P instructions to the letter, as I said in my OP (where they wanted two high-capacity HDs connected to give the PSU a minimum one amp load--BTW, I finally checked my HDs--each one pulls 0.6 amp). I have also tried it w/absolutely nothing connected, just the jumpered pins.

Short answer, no matter what permutation I tried (and I tried at least 5 different ways), nothing happened. The PSU fan never came on, and nothing happened on the mobo, other than that 5v "standby" LED, whcih as previously noted by jackschmittusa, doesn't really mean anything.

I have to keep wondering, as I mentioned in my OP: Amazon has gotten into this habit in the past year or so of packing things really crappy. I wasn't joking when I said the PSU came in a huge box from Amazon--I literally could have put four--four!!!--of the same size PSU in that box. It might have been okay, except that all they put in for packing material was a small amount of folded brown paper. No peanuts, no air-pillows, nada. The PSU box was just sliding and bumping around in there, and now that I think about it, one corner of the PSU box does have a crimp in it, like it hit the side of the shipping box and something outside of it, really hard.
 

robisbell

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Oct 27, 2007
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go ahead and contact amazon about a replacement, and complain about the way the 1st one was packed. when you get the new one retry it outside of the case first.
 

jackschmittusa

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Sounds as though the cpu did receive power for at least a short time if it melted the hs compound.

Amazon is pretty good about returns.

The 45% figure on non-oem mbs is BS. I have easily bought more than 100 mbs over the years and have never gotten a bad one. (The joke with my grandkids every Xmas is "Ohhh, a new motherboard!" as they unwrap presents because mb boxes are what we always use for sweaters and such.) I have bought both top tier boards (Asus, MSI, Gigabyte, etc.) as well as low end (ECS, Amptron, PCChips, etc.) and had equal success. I'm sure that some people get an occasional bad one or that sometimes they must have a bad day at the factory and put out a skid of bad ones of a particular model. If the figure were anywhere near 45%, you would not have to stumble onto the fact, it would be common knowledge.
 

Evenkeel

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Originally posted by: jackschmittusa
Sounds as though the cpu did receive power for at least a short time if it melted the hs compound.

Amazon is pretty good about returns.

The 45% figure on non-oem mbs is BS. I have easily bought more than 100 mbs over the years and have never gotten a bad one. (The joke with my grandkids every Xmas is "Ohhh, a new motherboard!" as they unwrap presents because mb boxes are what we always use for sweaters and such.) I have bought both top tier boards (Asus, MSI, Gigabyte, etc.) as well as low end (ECS, Amptron, PCChips, etc.) and had equal success. I'm sure that some people get an occasional bad one or that sometimes they must have a bad day at the factory and put out a skid of bad ones of a particular model. If the figure were anywhere near 45%, you would not have to stumble onto the fact, it would be common knowledge.

I talked to Amazon, and made some pointed remarks about their packing technique. I am getting a refund form them on the PSU, and have ordered a new oone directly from PC Power. It's consting me about $50 more than Amazon, but I'm having it shipped 2-day, and I'm pretty sure PC Power know how to pack a PSU.

Re: 45% on mobos--good to know. Prob someone w/an axe to grind.

Re: the hs compound melting--should I be worried about the health of the CPU? I also bought that from Amazon (at least they packed it a little better), and told the Amazon rep last night that if the blown PSU had taken the chip down w/it, I was going to want that replaced by them, and to pls note that in her notes. She said okay.
 

Evenkeel

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Further thoughts:

I had a long conversation w/a great tech at PC Power, and we fully discussed the situation. I asked him if it was his build, would he now trust that motherboard? Given that we don't know where the short came from--I really did check everything 5-6 times, guys, and I could find absolutely nothing amiss--should I trust that mobo, or should I RMA it?

I also told him about all the measure s I went thru when first assembling the build to avoid electrostatic charge, and he seemed impressed, so I should have had all that covered, even w/my momentary lapse. If the short came back thru the mobo somehow, and not from any extra standoffs :), I don't want to fry the replacement PSU either.

jackschmittusa said "Sounds like the psu blew. Don't know if it took anything else with it though. " Did it take the mobo? Or did the mobo take the PSU?

I'm feeling the mobo should go back for replacement. What do you think?
 

Evenkeel

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And one dumb question:

Regarding bench-testing: This should be moot, given that the Intel DX38BT board I used has a tiny little power buttom right on the motherboard, but:

Will a motherboard power up when the PSU is plugged in, and the PSU's power switch is turned to the "on" position?

IOW, those two little pin headers on the motherboard, that connect to the on/off switch on the computer case, are disconnected when bench-testing a board. So does the mobo just turn on when the PSU switch is turned "on"?

As I said, this should be moot w/the board I used, as the manual says to turn the board on or off while bench-testing, just hold down the little on/off button for 3 seconds. But I want to make sure I cover everything. So does a bench-tes motherboard automatically power up when you flip the on switch on a PSU? Or are you supposed to jumper those two little power-switch head pins somehow?
 

jackschmittusa

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No, it does not just turn on. You need to short the 2 pins momentarily to start things up. I actually have packs of parts salvaged old cases on my bench and in my service kit. I keep a switch, a speaker, and 2 different color leds in each kit. (Just don't use an old "turbo" switch from an old case, they are on/off, not momentary contact.) I connect these when bench testing.
 

Evenkeel

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Originally posted by: jackschmittusa
No, it does not just turn on. You need to short the 2 pins momentarily to start things up. I actually have packs of parts salvaged old cases on my bench and in my service kit. I keep a switch, a speaker, and 2 different color leds in each kit. (Just don't use an old "turbo" switch from an old case, they are on/off, not momentary contact.) I connect these when bench testing.

But, at least in the case of my DX38BT, the on-board power button should have worked, if the board was going to power up at all, right?

Because I'd hate to think that, after all that struggle to test the board, I'd have missed something as simple as having to short those two pins.

BTW, when you say short the 2 pins "momentarily", are we talking just a quick brush w/a wire across both pins at the same time?

At any rate, I just arranged an RMA for the mobo, so I will have a new mobo and PSU. PSU will be here in a couple of days, but it will probably take 10 days turnaround to get the new mobo.

Now... What are the chances the short could have come from the RAM, the graphics card, or the CPU?
 

robisbell

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use a flat blade screw driver. I'll look up this board in the AM and see what this button is you're talking about on it.
 

Evenkeel

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Originally posted by: robisbell
use a flat blade screw driver. I'll look up this board in the AM and see what this button is you're talking about on it.

Re: flat blade screwdriver--after powering on the PSU just use the blade of the screwdriver to touch both header pins at the same time, for about half a second?

Re: the power button. Yes, this is something new Intel has added, and in an otherwise lackluster review on the board by "Trusted Reviews", they lauded Intel for putting it on there.

I'll make it easier for you to find out about the button. Go to Intel's site here, download the PDF "English Product Guide" (unless you can read Chinese ;) ), go to "1 Desktop Board Features" in the contents pane in the Table of Contents pane on the left, expand it, go to "Desktop Board Components" and click on it. There you will jump to the drawing of the board, labelled w/its components. (You should be on page 12.

Down the left side of the drawing, look for the component labelled "Z". That is the button. Scroll down a page, and you will see a table listing it as "Onboard power button".

Further down the Table of Contents under the same heading ("1 Desktop Board Features", you will see an entry, "Onboard Power Button". Clicking on that will take you to the page that explains the buttons operation.

For those who don't have time to download the manual, the text description accompanying this entry reads as follows:

"A power button on the Desktop Board (see Figure 4) can be used to turn the computer on or off. This button is intended for use at integration facilities to remove standby power before making changes to the system configuration, or for testing purposes. The power button on the front panel is recommended for all other instances of turning the computer on or off. To turn off the computer using the onboard power button, keep the button pressed down for three seconds."

I am having a little trouble understanding it, tho. It does sound like I can use it as a temporary power button to bench-test, right? It's not like I'll use it 50 times, just hopefully 2 or 3 times while benchtesting.

Or I can go the screwdriver route. ;)

BTW, I ordered one of these mats, to put the motherboard on when I bench-test the new one. I figured it would be easier than the cardboard.
 

Evenkeel

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Another question:

Since I had to remove the HS fan and CPU before sending back the motherboard, of course I now have to remove and clean off the melted thermal compound. How should I do this? I thought maybe I should use a 100% cotton terry rag to wipe it off both surfaces, then clean w/isopropyl alcohol. But even this sounds nervous-making, esp on the CPU side. How should I clean off the old compound?

As far as putting new compound on, I decided it would be easier to just get Intel's version. Of course, they don't yet sell the nice little geometric pad for the QX9650--it's only available in grease form, delivered via one of those syringes. I've never done this before, but I've read enough to know that if you put on too much, or too little, you are screwed, blued, and tattooed. (the syringes were only a buck apiece, so I ordered 3, figuring that wold allow me to screw up at least twice before I have to get it right!)

Can you guys explaing both processes--how to clean the old off, and how to put the new on?

And yet another question:

The issue has been raised that maybe I should also send back the RAM, CPU, and graphics card. Since I just got used to the idea of sending back the PSU and mobo (and waiting for the inevitable 10-day turnaround for them), I'm cringing at the thought of sending all that back and starting over. OTOH, it might be dumb not to.

When I got the new motherboard, I had been planning to start the bench-testing very conservatively. I'd read that you could just put in the CPU and fire it up. You'd get a bunch of beeps when the mobo complains that it can't find any RAM, but at least at that point I'd know if it would even start w/just the first component. Then I thought I'd add one stick of the DDR3 RAM, and start it again. Then put in the second stick, and restart. Finally, I'd put in the graphics card and do another restart. This would give me a chance to check each component, and if one is bad, the system will either not start, or give error beeps.
But...

If one of those components is the one that's causing the short, I could fry everything and be right back to square one. How do you guys make decisions about this under these conditions? My mind is already reeling. And what would I tell the vendors about why I'm exchanging them?

What should I do?