F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Device fails to power up following an unexpected electricity interruption.

Device fails to power up following an unexpected electricity interruption.

Device fails to power up following an unexpected electricity interruption.

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Pancake109953
Junior Member
45
09-10-2016, 06:17 PM
#1
Hi, I experienced a power outage while using Blender. When electricity returned, I tried restarting it but received no response. No fans ran, and the LEDs didn<|pad|>. I reset the CMOS, unplugged the PSU, cleared the charge cycle, tried different outlets, but nothing worked. Any assistance would be really helpful, I have assignments coming up.
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Pancake109953
09-10-2016, 06:17 PM #1

Hi, I experienced a power outage while using Blender. When electricity returned, I tried restarting it but received no response. No fans ran, and the LEDs didn<|pad|>. I reset the CMOS, unplugged the PSU, cleared the charge cycle, tried different outlets, but nothing worked. Any assistance would be really helpful, I have assignments coming up.

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Bartekdwarf
Posting Freak
791
09-11-2016, 02:55 AM
#2
It might have happened before the outage or after power came back, causing a spike that damaged the PSU (or possibly blowing its internal fuse). Ideally, turning it off at the switch or unplugging it completely is a safer approach during any power disruption.
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Bartekdwarf
09-11-2016, 02:55 AM #2

It might have happened before the outage or after power came back, causing a spike that damaged the PSU (or possibly blowing its internal fuse). Ideally, turning it off at the switch or unplugging it completely is a safer approach during any power disruption.

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GiddyMomo
Junior Member
7
09-11-2016, 10:32 AM
#3
Turn off the PC from the power supply and pause for 1-2 minutes; occasionally, safety circuits need a moment to recover.
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GiddyMomo
09-11-2016, 10:32 AM #3

Turn off the PC from the power supply and pause for 1-2 minutes; occasionally, safety circuits need a moment to recover.

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peter4everpan
Member
235
09-12-2016, 11:00 PM
#4
Hi, I fixed the problem. I unplugged the front panel IO and used a screwdriver to jump the circuit, which restored power. It looks like the surge damaged both my front panel and some fan headers. Luckily, there are no performance issues beyond the thermal throttle from lost intake fans. I’ll need to replace my motherboard.
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peter4everpan
09-12-2016, 11:00 PM #4

Hi, I fixed the problem. I unplugged the front panel IO and used a screwdriver to jump the circuit, which restored power. It looks like the surge damaged both my front panel and some fan headers. Luckily, there are no performance issues beyond the thermal throttle from lost intake fans. I’ll need to replace my motherboard.

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BrandonMWX
Member
140
09-18-2016, 05:40 AM
#5
That's quite an obscure failure mode I have to say, especially given the power button is usually wired straight through with nothing fancy to break.
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BrandonMWX
09-18-2016, 05:40 AM #5

That's quite an obscure failure mode I have to say, especially given the power button is usually wired straight through with nothing fancy to break.