F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Connecteur pour processeur sur la carte mère 4 CPU

Connecteur pour processeur sur la carte mère 4 CPU

Connecteur pour processeur sur la carte mère 4 CPU

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126
04-20-2025, 12:13 AM
#1
Hey there, I see you're having some issues with your new case setup. After putting your computer inside and trying to power it on, you noticed the CPU connector wasn't seated correctly. You thought it might be a design issue since the pins fit but needed force, and you tried reseating the RAM without success. You also checked for motherboard damage, though your lights are still working. What should you do next?
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HUNGERGAMEMARK
04-20-2025, 12:13 AM #1

Hey there, I see you're having some issues with your new case setup. After putting your computer inside and trying to power it on, you noticed the CPU connector wasn't seated correctly. You thought it might be a design issue since the pins fit but needed force, and you tried reseating the RAM without success. You also checked for motherboard damage, though your lights are still working. What should you do next?

M
mousse2006
Member
157
04-20-2025, 03:37 AM
#2
It seems you might have damaged the circuit. The voltage was applied in the wrong direction, which isn't safe for DC systems.
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mousse2006
04-20-2025, 03:37 AM #2

It seems you might have damaged the circuit. The voltage was applied in the wrong direction, which isn't safe for DC systems.

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Spawn377
Member
215
04-25-2025, 05:25 PM
#3
Just because some lights are on doesn't mean that it is NOT fried. Any time you need force to plug something in, STOP and reassess why you need so much force. It is a good chance that something is not right (occasionally force is needed - but slowing down and double/triple checking costs nothing other than time)
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Spawn377
04-25-2025, 05:25 PM #3

Just because some lights are on doesn't mean that it is NOT fried. Any time you need force to plug something in, STOP and reassess why you need so much force. It is a good chance that something is not right (occasionally force is needed - but slowing down and double/triple checking costs nothing other than time)

L
liang_hao_yan
Member
221
05-03-2025, 01:29 AM
#4
Plugging the CPU's 4-pin connector upside down might ruin the motherboard and possibly the CPU.
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liang_hao_yan
05-03-2025, 01:29 AM #4

Plugging the CPU's 4-pin connector upside down might ruin the motherboard and possibly the CPU.

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Babogamer4563
Member
69
05-03-2025, 02:09 AM
#5
Not always - I faced a similar issue too, but the incorrect plug fit seemed fine initially. Once I realized the locking tab was misplaced, I swapped it out and it worked perfectly afterward.
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Babogamer4563
05-03-2025, 02:09 AM #5

Not always - I faced a similar issue too, but the incorrect plug fit seemed fine initially. Once I realized the locking tab was misplaced, I swapped it out and it worked perfectly afterward.

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edgarzore
Junior Member
3
05-09-2025, 12:02 AM
#6
Well that seems crazy, but maybe there is a protection against it... I would thinking sending the wrong voltage down the wrong pins would fry things though.
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edgarzore
05-09-2025, 12:02 AM #6

Well that seems crazy, but maybe there is a protection against it... I would thinking sending the wrong voltage down the wrong pins would fry things though.

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bishopboys68
Posting Freak
899
05-09-2025, 12:19 AM
#7
These connections include two power and two ground pins. One likely handled power directly to ground, while another served as a ground pin for power with the remaining two still functioning properly. The plug was rotated 90 degrees from its standard orientation. It seems the setup might have caused an issue, but I wouldn't intentionally repeat it to test further.
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bishopboys68
05-09-2025, 12:19 AM #7

These connections include two power and two ground pins. One likely handled power directly to ground, while another served as a ground pin for power with the remaining two still functioning properly. The plug was rotated 90 degrees from its standard orientation. It seems the setup might have caused an issue, but I wouldn't intentionally repeat it to test further.