CPU Problem??

  • Thread starter Thread starter Andrew
  • Start date Start date
A

Andrew

Ok this is what has been goin on. Ever since i had my
motherboard and my power supply get fried due to a power
surge i have been having problems with my tower. It only
started about a week afer the parts got fried and i put in
the new parts, but basically with out any warning at all
my tower will make a rather disturbing clunking sound and
then just reboot itself. at first it wud reboot and then
just keep rebooting till it was turned off. but now it
will generally reboot just once or twice. I have been told
that it is my processer and that i need to get a new on
but i wanted to see if anyone else knows different or has
any ideas about what it cud be doing it. If u need any
more information about it please email me
 
A power surge destroyed your old mobo/CPU, but you didn't
replace the power supply too.

If you had a power surge everything inside the computer
could have been damaged, But the power supply would have
had to fail in part to allow that surge.

Does the clunking sound indicate a mechanical problem?
Certainly does, clunks come from movement and the only
things that move inside the computer are hard drives. Your
CD/DVD only turn when in use.


--
The people think the Constitution protects their rights;
But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome.


| Ok this is what has been goin on. Ever since i had my
| motherboard and my power supply get fried due to a power
| surge i have been having problems with my tower. It only
| started about a week afer the parts got fried and i put in
| the new parts, but basically with out any warning at all
| my tower will make a rather disturbing clunking sound and
| then just reboot itself. at first it wud reboot and then
| just keep rebooting till it was turned off. but now it
| will generally reboot just once or twice. I have been told
| that it is my processer and that i need to get a new on
| but i wanted to see if anyone else knows different or has
| any ideas about what it cud be doing it. If u need any
| more information about it please email me
 
he's right on you should definately replace the power supply but as far as the rest.....

an electrical device can "clunk" without moving parts, temperature state changes can cause audible noise in any objec

also your power supply unless extremely cheap has a moving part, the fa

defiantely replace the power suppl

if still clunks

go with a new cd ro

still clunk

try a new hard driv

if still clunking after that try new cpu heatsink/fan
 
In my defense, the wiper arm of the hard drive is likely to
clunk if it hits the stop hard, a fan is more likely to make
a different sound, either a bearing whine or a buzz as the
blades hit something.

And you are right that temperature changes can be heard as
parts expand and contract, I remember fondly listening to
the roof creak with every 5 degree temp drop below zero F.


message
| he's right on you should definately replace the power
supply but as far as the rest......
|
| an electrical device can "clunk" without moving parts,
temperature state changes can cause audible noise in any
object
|
|
| also your power supply unless extremely cheap has a moving
part, the fan
|
| defiantely replace the power supply
|
| if still clunks,
|
| go with a new cd rom
|
| still clunks
|
| try a new hard drive
|
| if still clunking after that try new cpu heatsink/fan
 
From information as provided, only wild speculation can be
provided. For example, what type of surge was it? Examples
from what else was damaged by the surge would help define that
necessary information. Is nothing else damaged? Then it was
no surge. Surges occur typically once every eight years. And
most are too small to overwhelm existing protection inside
that power supply.

Second, power supplies (if not bought on price) contain
overvoltage protection that, essentially, separates computer
components from power supply. Surges most often bypass supply
to damage electronics; don't damage the supply. But those
'power supplies bought on price' can fail internally (not from
surges). The failure can then take out the rest of the
machine because it was bought on price - missing essential
functions.

If your machine boots and displays a message on screen, then
the processor is just fine. Processor is not a reason for
klunking.

First collect some facts. Is the power supply and other
parts of that subsystem working properly? First data taken
are DC voltages using a 3.5 digit multimeter. In your case,
voltages on the red, orange, yellow, and gray wires (from
power supply) are important numerical facts. Only with
numerical facts can one respond with something more than
speculation. Get the meter that is today so standard as to be
sold even in Sears, Radio Shack, Home Depot, and Lowes.
 
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