- Joined
- Mar 27, 2007
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- 2,753 (0.44/day)
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- louisiana
Processor | Intel Core i7-4790 Haswell Quad-Core 3.6GHz LGA 1150 84W |
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Motherboard | GIGABYTE GA-H87-D3H LGA 1150 Intel H87 HDMI |
Cooling | CPU - Cooler Master Hyper T4 / Case - cooler master 120mm rear case fan (Air cooling) |
Memory | 32GB (4 x 8GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) |
Video Card(s) | GTX1060 6GB |
Storage | Samsung 512 GB 840 PRO SSD Main Drive and Samsung 512 GB 840 EVO SSD Backup Drive |
Display(s) | ASUS 23" LED Monitor |
Case | COOLER MASTER Centurion 5 (silver & black) |
Audio Device(s) | (onboard audio) Realtek ALC892 |
Power Supply | CORSAIR SU-750TX 750W ATX12V / EPS12V |
Software | Windows 10 Home Premium 64bit Edition |
I just got a bad CPU (my first one ever) so I was just wondering if this (getting a bad one) was rare and not all that common or it happens just as often as with video cards, mobo, and PSU like everything else?
I always thought CPUs were one of those things that are such detailed and expensive parts that every one gets tested to work before it is sent out. im not talking boot up and benchmarks but basic power up so you know it work kind of testing.
Don't they run basic power up tests on every one before its packaged?
(I upgraded my i5 to an i7 and it would not power up, it kept tripping my PSU and going into a power on/off loop and wouldn't even complete the computer startup)
I always thought CPUs were one of those things that are such detailed and expensive parts that every one gets tested to work before it is sent out. im not talking boot up and benchmarks but basic power up so you know it work kind of testing.
Don't they run basic power up tests on every one before its packaged?
(I upgraded my i5 to an i7 and it would not power up, it kept tripping my PSU and going into a power on/off loop and wouldn't even complete the computer startup)