F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Do you have any issues with the Lenovo P500 picky motherboards?

Do you have any issues with the Lenovo P500 picky motherboards?

Do you have any issues with the Lenovo P500 picky motherboards?

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Rubyrose9686
Member
50
08-05-2016, 10:48 PM
#1
Hello, everyone... I'm here to try and assist. I thought I had everything figured out, but... I'm not sure. I purchased a used Lenovo P500 and planned to upgrade it fully. I considered getting a gaming X99 MB, but opted for the older workstation design instead. I ordered a 650-watt proprietary power supply to replace the 490-watt stock unit. The original PS had a 6-pin PCIe connector, but I acquired a custom dual-drop adapter that converts it to 6+2 and 6-pin PCIe. The new PS was ready for installation, but I connected it to the old adapter which only had 6 pins. When I tested it with an RX480, the PS refused to power up, which I suspected would cause it to overload and shut down. Unfortunately, it did—my motherboard was damaged. I checked the cable connections with a multimeter and everything looked fine. The BIOS had overload warnings enabled, which I thought might have triggered the boot issue. I tried flashing the BIOS, but it kept power cycling and showing an amber warning light. Anyone have thoughts on whether a new motherboard with the correct PSU would prevent this? Also, does the BIOS have settings for overload protection that could have prevented it?
R
Rubyrose9686
08-05-2016, 10:48 PM #1

Hello, everyone... I'm here to try and assist. I thought I had everything figured out, but... I'm not sure. I purchased a used Lenovo P500 and planned to upgrade it fully. I considered getting a gaming X99 MB, but opted for the older workstation design instead. I ordered a 650-watt proprietary power supply to replace the 490-watt stock unit. The original PS had a 6-pin PCIe connector, but I acquired a custom dual-drop adapter that converts it to 6+2 and 6-pin PCIe. The new PS was ready for installation, but I connected it to the old adapter which only had 6 pins. When I tested it with an RX480, the PS refused to power up, which I suspected would cause it to overload and shut down. Unfortunately, it did—my motherboard was damaged. I checked the cable connections with a multimeter and everything looked fine. The BIOS had overload warnings enabled, which I thought might have triggered the boot issue. I tried flashing the BIOS, but it kept power cycling and showing an amber warning light. Anyone have thoughts on whether a new motherboard with the correct PSU would prevent this? Also, does the BIOS have settings for overload protection that could have prevented it?