- Jun 22, 2004
- 12,075
- 11
- 81
So I have a relatively new build:
Intel E6600
Zalman 7700 Cu
Asus P5W-DH Deluxe
2 x 1GB OCZ DDR2
Maxtor 300GB SATA
eVGA 7900 GTO
Here is the issue:
When I power the computer up after it has been off for any period of time, an hour or overnight, the computer doesn't POST. That is, the lights on the keyboard to not flash and I do not get any POSTing on my monitor.
If I continually restart the computer, toggle the PSU, etc, the computer ultimately POSTs. But then, it restarts when it gets to the Windows loading screen. It keeps restarting and getting further and further into the Windows loading screen until Windows loads successfully. There are probably 3 or 4 more reboots until the computer is stable.
I know that it is not the power supply (checked with a brand new 600w PSU), and it is not the HDD (checked with an HDD known to be good). Also, it is not an issue with the MB BIOS, I flashed those to the newest version. So it is the RAM, CPU, MB, or GFX.
What do you think it is? Why would the computer restart, load, restart, load further, restart, load further, restart, stable? That makes me think that it isn't an actual physical defect.
Intel E6600
Zalman 7700 Cu
Asus P5W-DH Deluxe
2 x 1GB OCZ DDR2
Maxtor 300GB SATA
eVGA 7900 GTO
Here is the issue:
When I power the computer up after it has been off for any period of time, an hour or overnight, the computer doesn't POST. That is, the lights on the keyboard to not flash and I do not get any POSTing on my monitor.
If I continually restart the computer, toggle the PSU, etc, the computer ultimately POSTs. But then, it restarts when it gets to the Windows loading screen. It keeps restarting and getting further and further into the Windows loading screen until Windows loads successfully. There are probably 3 or 4 more reboots until the computer is stable.
I know that it is not the power supply (checked with a brand new 600w PSU), and it is not the HDD (checked with an HDD known to be good). Also, it is not an issue with the MB BIOS, I flashed those to the newest version. So it is the RAM, CPU, MB, or GFX.
What do you think it is? Why would the computer restart, load, restart, load further, restart, load further, restart, stable? That makes me think that it isn't an actual physical defect.
