- Joined
- Jan 12, 2010
- Messages
- 212 (0.04/day)
Processor | amd fx8350 4.0ghz stock speeds 8cores |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus m5a99fx pro r2.0 |
Cooling | coolermaster nepton 280L |
Memory | 16gb RAM |
Video Card(s) | gigabyte windforce r9 290 |
Storage | OCZ 120gb SSD and 1tb hitachi HDD |
Display(s) | AOC 2436 24inch FULL HD |
Case | corsair 750D |
Power Supply | CORSAIR HX series 850w |
Software | WINDOWS 7 64bit |
So uh i got a really weird problem, something that I've never encountered or heard of before in my many years of building computers. It happens COMPLETELY RANDOMLY, one morning i would wake up and my pc won't turn on, all LEDs on my motherboard are lit and if i even move my mouse the LEDS on the mouse will turn on like normal, but if i press the power button on my case, literally nothing would happen. To temporarily fix it, I unplug my power cable from the powerboard im using (some $70 AUD BELKIN one) and just plug it into a different slot on the same powerboard and JUST doing that would allow my pc to turn on... My pc would be good for a few days even sometimes for a few weeks and all randomly one morning my pc wouldn't turn on again, COMPLETELY RANDOM. When my pc is turned on literally nothing weird happens, I would be able to play a game for 6 hours + and nothing weird would happen. So I don't think its hardware related but i could be wrong, when the pc does boot, it boots up fine no errors whatsoever. My pc specs are as follows:
CPU: i7 7700k STock speeds
RAM: 16gb DDR4 ram 3000MHz (Corsair Vengence)
PSU: seasonic-x 1250w (gold certified)
GPU: ASUS GTX 1080
Motherboard: MSI Z270 gaming M7
I already tried using 2 separate power boards, so I don't think electricity overload or what ever is the problem.
Computer, monitor and external amp and dac plugged into one power board
Reciever, subwoofer and ps4 pro plugged into a different separate powerboard.
CPU: i7 7700k STock speeds
RAM: 16gb DDR4 ram 3000MHz (Corsair Vengence)
PSU: seasonic-x 1250w (gold certified)
GPU: ASUS GTX 1080
Motherboard: MSI Z270 gaming M7
I already tried using 2 separate power boards, so I don't think electricity overload or what ever is the problem.
Computer, monitor and external amp and dac plugged into one power board
Reciever, subwoofer and ps4 pro plugged into a different separate powerboard.