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Thread: pc turns off immediately after turning on

  1. #1
    Ext User(Nick) Guest

    pc turns off immediately after turning on

    I have a pc with a gigabyte motherboard which has been working ok for
    the last 2 years.

    Two days ago, it turned off on its own. Since then, when I press the on
    switch, it briefly comes on for about 1 second and goes off (lights and
    fans come on and go off after 1 second).

    What could be wrong? Faulty switch? Power supply finished?
    Motherboard/CPU faulty?


  2. #2
    Ext User(SteveH) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    "Nick" <area5pr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
    news:1145972970.165015.157210@t31g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
    >I have a pc with a gigabyte motherboard which has been working ok for
    > the last 2 years.
    >
    > Two days ago, it turned off on its own. Since then, when I press the on
    > switch, it briefly comes on for about 1 second and goes off (lights and
    > fans come on and go off after 1 second).
    >
    > What could be wrong? Faulty switch? Power supply finished?
    > Motherboard/CPU faulty?
    >

    Could be any of those things. However it could just be that the CPU fan is
    u/s. Although it may still be going round, if the speed sensor has stopped
    working, your mobo will see the fan as not working and shut the system down
    in the manner you describe. So, as they are cheap, try another fan on the
    CPU heatsink and see what happens.

    SteveH



  3. #3
    Ext User(Paul) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    In article <O9q3g.59223$wl.34308@text.news.blueyonder.co.uk >, "SteveH"
    <steve.hough@REMOVEMEblueyonder.co.uk> wrote:

    > "Nick" <area5pr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
    > news:1145972970.165015.157210@t31g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
    > >I have a pc with a gigabyte motherboard which has been working ok for
    > > the last 2 years.
    > >
    > > Two days ago, it turned off on its own. Since then, when I press the on
    > > switch, it briefly comes on for about 1 second and goes off (lights and
    > > fans come on and go off after 1 second).
    > >
    > > What could be wrong? Faulty switch? Power supply finished?
    > > Motherboard/CPU faulty?
    > >

    > Could be any of those things. However it could just be that the CPU fan is
    > u/s. Although it may still be going round, if the speed sensor has stopped
    > working, your mobo will see the fan as not working and shut the system down
    > in the manner you describe. So, as they are cheap, try another fan on the
    > CPU heatsink and see what happens.
    >
    > SteveH


    The BIOS has that fan checking feature in it, on some
    motherboards. It might take several seconds for the BIOS
    to figure that out, that the fan is too slow.

    The Athlon64 and Pentium4 have THERMTRIP, which is an internal
    detection of overheat. That signal is connected into the PS_ON#
    signal logic that controls the ATX power supply. If the heatsink
    falls off your processor, then shutdown in 1 second would be
    about right. If the fan is stopped, it might take a bit longer
    before the silicon die can heat up the heatsink enough to
    trip the overheat detection.

    The Athlon(32) didn't have thermal protection built into the
    silicon die. But some versions did have a thermal diode, suitable
    for monitoring with an external device. Some motherboards, like
    the A7N8X series, had a small eight pin chip, that checked the
    thermal diode output, and prevented burnout. Some other Athlon
    motherboards used their hardware monitor chip to measure
    the temperature, but there was no guarantee that the processor
    would realize it was overheating in time. And lastly, there
    were some other moherboards, that had no protection implemented
    at all.

    The power supply probably has its own protection logic, and
    the complexity of that logic (what it is checking for) depends
    on the price of the supply. Overvoltage, undervoltage, overcurrent
    are some possibilities, and even internal PSU temps might be
    another reason to shutdown.

    If the motherboard was faulty, it might just stay off or
    stay on. Turning on for a second and then turning off, is
    a little too clever for a motherboard on its own :-) While
    I can think of ways it might happen, I've never read of any
    such cases.

    I would check the condition of the heatsink/fan on the CPU
    very carefully. Including, as SteveH has pointed out, that
    the fan is still plugged in, and spins when the machine tries
    to start. If the fan spins, but the machine still shuts down,
    check the heatsink to see whether the clips are still
    applying enough pressure to keep the heatsink in contact
    with the processor. Sometimes a tab will snap and a clip
    will come loose.

    And if there is no effective thermal interface material between
    the heatsink and the CPU, like you used a thermal paste that
    dried out or pumped itself out from between the heatsink
    and CPU, that would be another reason for the CPU to overheat.
    The material that ships with an AMD or Intel processor, is
    not likely to do that, while a hobbyist applied paste is
    more likely to leave the scene on you.

    Paul

  4. #4
    Ext User(SteveH) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    "Paul" <nospam@needed.com> wrote in message
    news:nospam-2504061523290001@192.168.1.178...
    > In article <O9q3g.59223$wl.34308@text.news.blueyonder.co.uk >, "SteveH"
    > <steve.hough@REMOVEMEblueyonder.co.uk> wrote:
    >
    >> "Nick" <area5pr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
    >> news:1145972970.165015.157210@t31g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
    >> >I have a pc with a gigabyte motherboard which has been working ok for
    >> > the last 2 years.
    >> >
    >> > Two days ago, it turned off on its own. Since then, when I press the on
    >> > switch, it briefly comes on for about 1 second and goes off (lights and
    >> > fans come on and go off after 1 second).
    >> >
    >> > What could be wrong? Faulty switch? Power supply finished?
    >> > Motherboard/CPU faulty?
    >> >

    >> Could be any of those things. However it could just be that the CPU fan
    >> is
    >> u/s. Although it may still be going round, if the speed sensor has
    >> stopped
    >> working, your mobo will see the fan as not working and shut the system
    >> down
    >> in the manner you describe. So, as they are cheap, try another fan on the
    >> CPU heatsink and see what happens.
    >>
    >> SteveH

    >
    > The BIOS has that fan checking feature in it, on some
    > motherboards. It might take several seconds for the BIOS
    > to figure that out, that the fan is too slow.
    >
    > The Athlon64 and Pentium4 have THERMTRIP, which is an internal
    > detection of overheat. That signal is connected into the PS_ON#
    > signal logic that controls the ATX power supply. If the heatsink
    > falls off your processor, then shutdown in 1 second would be
    > about right. If the fan is stopped, it might take a bit longer
    > before the silicon die can heat up the heatsink enough to
    > trip the overheat detection.
    >
    > The Athlon(32) didn't have thermal protection built into the
    > silicon die. But some versions did have a thermal diode, suitable
    > for monitoring with an external device. Some motherboards, like
    > the A7N8X series, had a small eight pin chip, that checked the
    > thermal diode output, and prevented burnout. Some other Athlon
    > motherboards used their hardware monitor chip to measure
    > the temperature, but there was no guarantee that the processor
    > would realize it was overheating in time. And lastly, there
    > were some other moherboards, that had no protection implemented
    > at all.
    >
    > The power supply probably has its own protection logic, and
    > the complexity of that logic (what it is checking for) depends
    > on the price of the supply. Overvoltage, undervoltage, overcurrent
    > are some possibilities, and even internal PSU temps might be
    > another reason to shutdown.
    >
    > If the motherboard was faulty, it might just stay off or
    > stay on. Turning on for a second and then turning off, is
    > a little too clever for a motherboard on its own :-)


    Not at all, this is exactly what happens when the CPU fan speed sensor isn't
    being read for some reason.

    While
    > I can think of ways it might happen, I've never read of any
    > such cases.
    >
    > I would check the condition of the heatsink/fan on the CPU
    > very carefully. Including, as SteveH has pointed out, that
    > the fan is still plugged in, and spins when the machine tries
    > to start. If the fan spins, but the machine still shuts down,
    > check the heatsink to see whether the clips are still
    > applying enough pressure to keep the heatsink in contact
    > with the processor. Sometimes a tab will snap and a clip
    > will come loose.
    >

    Except I didn't say that. I pointed out that if the speed sensor on the CPU
    fan fails, then most BIOS will stop the system to prevent CPU overheat. This
    is something I've seen and fixed by the simple expedient of replacing the
    fan several times. I've also seen this happen where a person building a PC
    has accidentally plugged the CPU fan into the wrong header.

    SteveH



  5. #5
    Ext User(Nick) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    Just tried a few things one of which gives a clue.

    If I unplug the ATX12v power voltage (I think this goes to the cpu) and
    then switch on, the power and fans stay on although the pc does not
    boot up for obvious reasons.

    So it could be something to do with the cpu (heatsink, fan, power
    supply, processor)?


  6. #6
    Ext User(SteveH) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    "Nick" <area5pr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
    news:1145999993.867083.51340@i39g2000cwa.googlegro ups.com...
    > Just tried a few things one of which gives a clue.
    >
    > If I unplug the ATX12v power voltage (I think this goes to the cpu) and
    > then switch on, the power and fans stay on although the pc does not
    > boot up for obvious reasons.
    >
    > So it could be something to do with the cpu (heatsink, fan, power
    > supply, processor)?
    >

    It could still be the CPU fan. If you have another fan avialable (it can be
    a case fan, if it has the right connector), plug it into where the CPU fan
    plugs into the mobo, and then try switching on. If it stays on, it means I'm
    right and your CPU fan needs replacing.
    If it does indeed stay on, tap the delete key (or whatever you need to do to
    get into your BIOS and then switch off again (you may have to hold in the
    power switch for 4 secs). Go and get yourself a new CPU fan and fit it, job
    done!
    If the above doesn't work, then you will need to start investigating other
    possibilities. The above could be the cheapest fix however.

    SteveH



  7. #7
    Ext User(DaveW) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    Most likely the PSU has failed. If not, then the motherboard would be the
    second most likely culprit.

    --
    DaveW

    ----------------
    "Nick" <area5pr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
    news:1145972970.165015.157210@t31g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
    >I have a pc with a gigabyte motherboard which has been working ok for
    > the last 2 years.
    >
    > Two days ago, it turned off on its own. Since then, when I press the on
    > switch, it briefly comes on for about 1 second and goes off (lights and
    > fans come on and go off after 1 second).
    >
    > What could be wrong? Faulty switch? Power supply finished?
    > Motherboard/CPU faulty?
    >




  8. #8
    Ext User(SteveH) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    "DaveW" <somewhere@zero.org> wrote in message
    news:RrCdnSOWYbwhNtPZRVn-rA@comcast.com...
    > Most likely the PSU has failed. If not, then the motherboard would be the
    > second most likely culprit.
    >
    > --
    > DaveW
    >

    In my experience, the most likely culprit is the speed sensor in the CPU
    fan, the failure of which often causes the symptoms the o/p describes. But
    as you say, could be the mobo, PSU etc.

    SteveH



  9. #9
    Ext User(Nick) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    I just borrowed a cpu fan off another pc and tried it and there is no
    difference. So its not cpu fan.

    I am going to replace the power supply next. Watch this space.


  10. #10
    Ext User(KC Computers) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on


    "Nick" <area5pr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
    news:1146057514.937908.310190@y43g2000cwc.googlegr oups.com...
    >I just borrowed a cpu fan off another pc and tried it and there is no
    > difference. So its not cpu fan.
    >
    > I am going to replace the power supply next. Watch this space.
    >


    Is the 4-pin power connector from the power supply attach properly
    to the motherboard?


    ---
    Kevin Chalker, Owner (KC COMPUTERS)
    E-mail: kc@kc-computers.com Web: www.kc-computers.com
    Internet dealer since 1991!!! See WWW.RESELLERRATINGS.COM!!!



  11. #11
    Ext User(Nick) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    Yes, the plug slots in correctly on the motherboard.

    btw its a Pentium4 2.4, Gigabyte motherboard. It has been working fine
    for 2 years. Then it crashed twice (rebooted itself). Then 3rd time it
    rebooted but did not get past all bios checks. Then after that there
    was no display and it switches off one second after being switched on.


  12. #12
    Ext User(Nick) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    Just replaced power supplu. No difference.

    Swapped out CPU - no difference.

    Clutching straws now.


  13. #13
    Ext User(SteveH) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    "Nick" <area5pr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
    news:1146083486.295425.5010@g10g2000cwb.googlegrou ps.com...
    > Just replaced power supplu. No difference.
    >
    > Swapped out CPU - no difference.
    >
    > Clutching straws now.
    >

    Any more bits you can swap out? Video card, memory etc. Have you tried it
    with no memory?
    Must admit, it is starting to look like the mobo. If you could get into the
    bios, which you presumably can't, I would say turn off the fan speed
    monitoring and see what happens.

    SteveH



  14. #14
    Ext User(JAD) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    look for bulging leaking or discolored capasitors, i think you said it was 2
    or 3 years old right?


    "Nick" <area5pr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
    news:1146083486.295425.5010@g10g2000cwb.googlegrou ps.com...
    > Just replaced power supplu. No difference.
    >
    > Swapped out CPU - no difference.
    >
    > Clutching straws now.
    >




  15. #15
    Ext User(Nick) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    Ok, I removed everything and and then started putting back together.
    HD ok, CD rom ok, memory ok - powering staying up. As soon as I put the
    AGP graphics card in, back to old habits...power goes off after 1 sec.

    Swapped agp card for another and still same. Tried putting a pci
    graphics card in - same.

    In fact if I put anything in the expansion slots, the symptoms come
    back. If I have nothing in expansions slots, power comes on ok and
    stays on, HD light comes for a while but cannot tell how far boot is
    getting as no display.

    So obviously there is something to do with expansion slots.


  16. #16
    Ext User(Nick) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    No option but to swap motherboard now. Will Win XP work as before from
    existing HD or do I have to install again.


  17. #17
    Ext User(SteveH) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    "Nick" <area5pr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
    news:1146159430.051749.157560@e56g2000cwe.googlegr oups.com...
    > No option but to swap motherboard now. Will Win XP work as before from
    > existing HD or do I have to install again.
    >

    It may, if it's close enough, but you won't have removed all the old drivers
    under Windows. Personally I always favour a reinstall.

    SteveH



  18. #18
    Ext User(Nick) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    But I dread losing all the software that is installed on it.

    Can I re-install/repair without losing my software and data?


  19. #19
    Ext User(SteveH) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    "Nick" <area5pr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
    news:1146206137.829582.215470@v46g2000cwv.googlegr oups.com...
    > But I dread losing all the software that is installed on it.
    >
    > Can I re-install/repair without losing my software and data?
    >

    You may be able to. You'll just have to try it. If you can get into XP,
    you'll just need to change the drivers and it should all work ok.

    Alternatively, when the XP install gets to the point where it wants you to
    select a drive/partition, you may get an option to repair an existing XP
    install, if the installer perceives your existing installation to be broken.

    Otherwise find a friend who is wiling to let you attach your existing drive
    to their PC and copy your data to cd/dvd

    SteveH



  20. #20
    Ext User(David Maynard) Guest

    Re: pc turns off immediately after turning on

    SteveH wrote:

    > "Nick" <area5pr@yahoo.com> wrote in message
    > news:1146206137.829582.215470@v46g2000cwv.googlegr oups.com...
    >
    >>But I dread losing all the software that is installed on it.
    >>
    >>Can I re-install/repair without losing my software and data?
    >>

    >
    > You may be able to. You'll just have to try it. If you can get into XP,
    > you'll just need to change the drivers and it should all work ok.
    >
    > Alternatively, when the XP install gets to the point where it wants you to
    > select a drive/partition, you may get an option to repair an existing XP
    > install, if the installer perceives your existing installation to be broken.


    The option to repair shows if there's an existing XP system on the hard
    drive, not that it's 'broken'.

    >
    > Otherwise find a friend who is wiling to let you attach your existing drive
    > to their PC and copy your data to cd/dvd
    >
    > SteveH
    >
    >



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