- Feb 4, 2009
- 6
- 0
- 0
First off, I'm new here and I hate to admit it but I'm here out of desperation. 
This all started about a month ago. At that time my computer was custom built with the following specs:
ASUS P5N-E SLI
Intel Core2 Duo E6750 (not overclocked)
4GB(2x2) OCZ DDR2800 (stock speeds)
2 SATA hard drives
8800GT
450W PSU
For a good solid year my computer had been running great, like a gem. No issues. Then one day the screen started flickering when I was in graphics-intensive games. I did some checking to see if the GPU was getting too hot, it didn't look like it. Well one day I got up to go get a drink, came back and the screen was black. At this point the computer wouldn't even POST with the video card in. So, since it was still barely under warranty I RMA'd the card to eVGA.
Just after all this, while I was waiting for my new video card, I did my taxes and realized I had a decent chunk of change coming my way, and some items I'd been eyeing on Newegg were on sale and had free shipping, so I bought it all. I figured when I got the replacement card back from evga I'd just sell it to someone.
My new stuff arrived. Here's what I ordered:
eVGA GTX 260
500W PSU
Intel Core2 Quad Q6600
I kept the same board and RAM.
First time I go to boot up the machine with the new stuff in it, I update the BIOS just to make sure it's up-to-date as the new CPU is pretty recent and the board about a year old. After updating the BIOS with no issues, I proceed to start installing Windows Vista. The installation is going veeerrrrryyy slowly. We're talking maybe 5-10 minutes between screens sometimes. So I go online to see if anyone else has had this issue, and one guy says he solved it by disabling his floppy drive in the BIOS settings. Makes sense since I don't have a floppy drive, so I go in and disable it.
Installation goes smoother, and I get my way through an installation of Vista, and begin to install Motherboard/video card drivers/antivirus on it.
This is when I start getting BSODs and random resets. At first it's not a big deal. I remember how back when I got the setup originally, the board wasn't detecting the right timings and voltages for the RAM. I remember having to up the NB voltage to 1.5
So I go in and do that. Still getting BSODs and now the RAM is failing basic tests in memtest86+. So, I contact OCZ and they grant me an RMA. Well, I just got the replacement RAM back from OCZ and I'm running into the exact same problems.
I can't figure out what it is. I've tried reloading BIOS defaults, stepping up voltages, manually setting timings, and keeping an eye on CPU temperature. The processor isn't getting hot just sitting idling at the BIOS screen. I would think if there were a serious cooling issue with the processor the temperature would creep pretty fast in the hardware monitor in the BIOS.
I've kept an eye on the GPU temp when I can get Windows stable enough to run it. Nothing strange there, even during the little time I can get into a game. The resets do seem to still be coming under "load" though. I was able to play Far Cry 2 for about 5 minutes before it just hard-rebooted. I checked CPU temp in the BIOS immediately after that reset and it wasn't more than about 45C.
I've thought about the possibility that maybe it's a power issue, but I would think 500W would be enough for what I've got. I'm only running 1 SATA HD and one optical drive.
I'm seriously sort of at my whit's end. The only other thing I can think to do is try to RMA the motherboard back to ASUS, but I don't like the prospect of having to go another 3 weeks without a computer. If anyone has any suggestions at all I'd be immensely grateful. Thanks.
			
			This all started about a month ago. At that time my computer was custom built with the following specs:
ASUS P5N-E SLI
Intel Core2 Duo E6750 (not overclocked)
4GB(2x2) OCZ DDR2800 (stock speeds)
2 SATA hard drives
8800GT
450W PSU
For a good solid year my computer had been running great, like a gem. No issues. Then one day the screen started flickering when I was in graphics-intensive games. I did some checking to see if the GPU was getting too hot, it didn't look like it. Well one day I got up to go get a drink, came back and the screen was black. At this point the computer wouldn't even POST with the video card in. So, since it was still barely under warranty I RMA'd the card to eVGA.
Just after all this, while I was waiting for my new video card, I did my taxes and realized I had a decent chunk of change coming my way, and some items I'd been eyeing on Newegg were on sale and had free shipping, so I bought it all. I figured when I got the replacement card back from evga I'd just sell it to someone.
My new stuff arrived. Here's what I ordered:
eVGA GTX 260
500W PSU
Intel Core2 Quad Q6600
I kept the same board and RAM.
First time I go to boot up the machine with the new stuff in it, I update the BIOS just to make sure it's up-to-date as the new CPU is pretty recent and the board about a year old. After updating the BIOS with no issues, I proceed to start installing Windows Vista. The installation is going veeerrrrryyy slowly. We're talking maybe 5-10 minutes between screens sometimes. So I go online to see if anyone else has had this issue, and one guy says he solved it by disabling his floppy drive in the BIOS settings. Makes sense since I don't have a floppy drive, so I go in and disable it.
Installation goes smoother, and I get my way through an installation of Vista, and begin to install Motherboard/video card drivers/antivirus on it.
This is when I start getting BSODs and random resets. At first it's not a big deal. I remember how back when I got the setup originally, the board wasn't detecting the right timings and voltages for the RAM. I remember having to up the NB voltage to 1.5
So I go in and do that. Still getting BSODs and now the RAM is failing basic tests in memtest86+. So, I contact OCZ and they grant me an RMA. Well, I just got the replacement RAM back from OCZ and I'm running into the exact same problems.
I can't figure out what it is. I've tried reloading BIOS defaults, stepping up voltages, manually setting timings, and keeping an eye on CPU temperature. The processor isn't getting hot just sitting idling at the BIOS screen. I would think if there were a serious cooling issue with the processor the temperature would creep pretty fast in the hardware monitor in the BIOS.
I've kept an eye on the GPU temp when I can get Windows stable enough to run it. Nothing strange there, even during the little time I can get into a game. The resets do seem to still be coming under "load" though. I was able to play Far Cry 2 for about 5 minutes before it just hard-rebooted. I checked CPU temp in the BIOS immediately after that reset and it wasn't more than about 45C.
I've thought about the possibility that maybe it's a power issue, but I would think 500W would be enough for what I've got. I'm only running 1 SATA HD and one optical drive.
I'm seriously sort of at my whit's end. The only other thing I can think to do is try to RMA the motherboard back to ASUS, but I don't like the prospect of having to go another 3 weeks without a computer. If anyone has any suggestions at all I'd be immensely grateful. Thanks.
 
				
		 
			 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
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