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PC suddenly shuts down and won't turn on again.

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Apr 26, 2022
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Good evening, as the title suggests, my pc today decided to shut down suddenly without giving errors, nor strange flashing flashes, assuming the power had gone out but it wasn't like that, I tried to turn it back on but it shows no signs of life, I also tried to change the power cable but it is not, and finally I also tried to remove and put back the motherboard battery but nothing. What could it be?


CPU: Intel i7 2600k
MOBO: Asus p8p67le
GPU: Nvidia GeForce gtx 1060
RAM: 16 GB
 
The PSU most possibly. Next suspect the motherboard and next one the CPU. Do you see any lights on the board when the PC is connected to the power outlet?
 
The PSU most possibly. Next suspect the motherboard and next one the CPU. Do you see any lights on the board when the PC is connected to the power outlet?
the motherboard led is on, i really don't know what to think
 
You are going to have to debug this by removing one part at a time to see what is causing the issue. Pull the rams and see if you get any error lights, and then the video card. Keep pulling stuff until your down to the CPU/Cooler and power supply.

led.png
 
If so, you need to practice the trial and error method. Disconnect every device (SATA, USB, etc) you can from the board and try again. If the PC still doesn't boot, leave only one DIMM of RAM and put it into another slot not used until now. Also, did you change anything of the PC recently? CPU cooler, GPU, HDD, nVME, etc.
 
If so, you need to practice the trial and error method. Disconnect every device (SATA, USB, etc) you can from the board and try again. If the PC still doesn't boot, leave only one DIMM of RAM and put it into another slot not used until now. Also, did you change anything of the PC recently? CPU cooler, GPU, HDD, nVME, etc.
A month ago I changed the CPU heatsink , and it never gave me problems until this evening.

hello, i changed the video card in the pc (i had a gtx 1060), and now i put an old one i had (gtx 770) and the pc turns on and starts. I tried to put the other one but it still doesn't start, I also had to change slots on the motherboard because the other slot didn't detect my video and the screen remained black. Is it possible that my video card is broken? I await your answers.
 
I suspect that you have tightened the screws of the heatsink on the board more than it should and that has caused issues to the PCI-E lanes connection from the CPU to the board. Try to release the heatsink a bit until thermals are getting significantly worse (more than 3C of increase in max cpu temp).
 
Bad 1060 or bad PSU.
 
Sudden PC shutdowns are usually caused by overheat somewhere, power supply or CPU.
 
the motherboard led is on, i really don't know what to think
Without knowing what LED is lit, or what it is doing, that really means nothing other than the motherboard is getting some power.

As Last_Troll noted, a lit LED could indicate a number of things.

Remember, your PSU must output 3 different voltages, +12VDC, +5VDC and +3.3VDC. The most basic lit LED indicates the PSU is, at least (perhaps only) providing the required +5Vsb standby voltage. It does not indicate all 3 voltages are present, clean, or stable.

Since EVERYTHING inside your computer case depends on good, clean, stable power, the first thing to do is to swap in a known good PSU to see if the problem persists.

Unless the computer recently moved and knocked about a little, I personally don't see how this could be due to you replacing your CPU heatsink since it worked fine after that for a whole month. IMO, if you did it incorrectly, problems would have surfaced immediately, or at least after just a few power (heat-up/cool-down) cycles.

That said, you did thoroughly remove the old TIM (thermal interface material) and clean the mating surfaces before properly applying a fresh, new, thin as possible, but thorough layer of new TIM, right?

BTW, why did you replace the old cooler?

If the second power supply does not fix the problem, then I agree, you are going to have to do some trial and error checking. Just remember to unplug from the wall first (to remove all voltages - including the +5Vsb voltage) and remember to touch bare metal of the case interior BEFORE reaching in to discharge any static in your body.
 
I mean it's pretty obvious at this point that the issue is the GPU.

That 770 requires PCIe power connectors, right ? So it's not like there is some issue with the PSU and can't provide 12V PCIe power or something like that.
 
change the CMOS battery with a new one. (they tend to be a cr2032… ) without that, Computers do not start. (well, in my experience)


What slot is the graphics card in? should be in the dark blue slot.

and vya domus has a good reminder… don’t forget the power to the GPU. (even though if the system is working the graphics card will state… “turn off computer, and plug in power to the card” or something like that…

use only 2 sticks of RAM , for now… in the black slots.

don’t connect the Harddrive/ssd right now, you just want to get into the BIOS.
once that happens, you good to go.
 
hello, i changed the video card in the pc (i had a gtx 1060), and now i put an old one i had (gtx 770) and the pc turns on and starts. I tried to put the other one but it still doesn't start, I also had to change slots on the motherboard because the other slot didn't detect my video and the screen remained black. Is it possible that my video card is broken? I await your answers.
This may be of no help, but the GTX has a TDP 120W rating vs. the 1060 has 230W.

If at all possible, could try the 1060 in another PC, before rushing to the PSU shop (from my experience, this looks like a PSU problem, and good tip changing the CR2032 is no harm, otoh cannot confirm whether it affects POST).
 
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This may be of no help, but the GTX has a TDP 120W rating vs. the 1060 has 230W.

If at all possible, could try the 1060 in another PC, before rushing to the PSU shop.
GTX1060 draws 120W max and 770 more than 250W, so the PSU most possibly isn't the culprint.
 
This may be of no help, but the GTX has a TDP 120W rating vs. the 1060 has 230W.

If at all possible, could try the 1060 in another PC, before rushing to the PSU shop (from my experience, this looks like a PSU problem, and good tip changing the CR2032 is no harm, otoh cannot confirm whether it affects POST).

You got that backwards, the 1060 uses less power.

It's not the PSU.
 
^^right, sorry, mixed them up.:oops:
 
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Power supply is toast.
I mean it's pretty obvious at this point that the issue is the GPU.
No it is not. Not in my experience. I had this happen a few times. PSU every time.
 
No it is not. Not in my experience. I had this happen a few times. PSU every time.

Explain how it's the PSU if a higher TDP GPU that uses the same PCIe cables works but a less power hungry GPU doesn't ?
 
Explain how it's the PSU if a more power GPU that uses the same PCIe cables works but a less power hungry GPU doesn't ?
Cant explain. Read above. Even with a gpu swap. I did read the whole thread before posting.
 
off topic, does a flat CR2032 battery cause something these newer UEFI boards will not POST. IMO, those CR2032 last about 2-3 years and begin weakening.
 
off topic, does a flat CR2032 battery cause something these newer UEFI boards will not POST.
Can do all weird and funky things. Not post possibly, but not power on, no.
 
Cant explain.
Then you just simply don't have anything to back up your claim, your conclusion is illogical.

With GPU 1 that has lower TDP, PC doesn't boot, LEDs light up.
With GPU 2 that has a higher TDP, PC does boot.

The logic is simple here, there is something wrong with GPU 1, PSU is fine.
 
You know what. I may be misunderstanding, by what is being described, not powering on and not posting are 2 different things. OP is describing a NO POST issue not a NOT POWERING ON issue. So this is my bad. Carry on its a bad GPU.

@Vya Domus
This is my error. I apologize.
 
The logic is simple here, there is something wrong with GPU 1, PSU is fine.
Maybe I am on a wrong trail here, why did the PC make a sudden shut down, usually if GPU is the problem it is just a black screen?
Then if the GPU is at fault, on POST there would "speaker beeps", if such connected. But yes, could be worthwhile to try the 1060 in another set.

Could not follow the whole thread at the moment, but did the GTX 770 work in both slots? (if not, motherboard problem, perhaps).

If it was me, would tear down the rig, begin with "cardboard build", check piece by piece.

Do we even know what PSU is in there and how old it is?
 
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