The Dude All American 6502 Posts user info edit post |
So the other day, there was a surge of power or something. My computer shut down and wouldn't turn on again. It smelled smokey afterward.
I got a new power supply (the same brand and power: Thermaltake 430 W). My computer loads like usual and then gets to the Windows XP loading screen. It tries to load on that screen for about 10-20 seconds then the screen goes blank.
Keep in mind that I built myself this computer ~2 years ago.
Is my computer done-fer ?
Thanks, The Dude 9/26/2008 3:15:50 PM |
LimpyNuts All American 16859 Posts user info edit post |
Something else is probably fucked and your computer crashes when Windows tries to initialize its driver. 9/26/2008 4:00:16 PM |
The Dude All American 6502 Posts user info edit post |
could it be the motherboard? hard drive? RAM? everything?
My guess is the hard drive because BIOS and everything runs fine.
[Edited on September 26, 2008 at 9:06 PM. Reason : yo] 9/26/2008 9:03:41 PM |
jcfox2 Veteran 155 Posts user info edit post |
The only option would be to format a harddrive and to reinstall windows on it. You can still recover your data from your other harddrive (assuming it didn't die) by using it as a secondary harddrive and copying the data from it. 9/27/2008 12:43:24 PM |
ScHpEnXeL Suspended 32613 Posts user info edit post |
You really need to not give advice in tech talk ever again. 9/27/2008 1:12:45 PM |
LimpyNuts All American 16859 Posts user info edit post |
I doubt it's the hard drive. If it were, you should get a blue screen when Windows is loading or it would just reboot.
It's more likely to be the graphics card, chipset on the motherboard, or the RAM.
If you've only got the one computer to work with, remove all the devices (including USB) from the computer and just leave the graphics card, 1 stick of RAM, keyboard, and the hard drive attached. If it still won't boot, I'd try moving the graphics card to a different slot or try another graphics card. If that doesn't work, try swapping out the RAM.
If there's something wrong with the chipset on the motherboard, you can have RAM slots, PCI slots, etc. that don't work or possibly none of them will work correctly.
If you've got another computer to mess with, you can try your devices in the other computer. That'll make it easier to determine if the problem is with the motherboard. 9/27/2008 3:05:47 PM |
jcfox2 Veteran 155 Posts user info edit post |
Run Memtest. Run a disk checker.
Those will rule out hard drive and ram problems. 9/27/2008 8:42:44 PM |
Seotaji All American 34244 Posts user info edit post |
i guess you weren't using a surge protector? 9/27/2008 9:03:36 PM |
moron All American 34142 Posts user info edit post |
Boot a linux bootcd and see what happens. 9/27/2008 9:06:12 PM |
The Dude All American 6502 Posts user info edit post |
^^I was using a surge protector
I'll try the stuff LimpyNuts is talking about 9/28/2008 11:08:44 PM |