F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Is your computer damaged or non-functional?

Is your computer damaged or non-functional?

Is your computer damaged or non-functional?

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gadi7
Junior Member
45
03-14-2024, 05:33 AM
#1
Hello, my computer is behaving oddly and I'm unsure what to do. After spilling water on my desk, cleaning it up didn't help the situation. The PC won't boot properly now—when I press the power button it turns on, fans and lights work, but the monitor fails to display anything. The most puzzling part is that it stays on even when I try to shut it down. I only noticed a few small water spots, and it didn't react when I spilled more, so I don't think it's water damage. After several attempts, I'm seeing CPU and DRAM errors through the motherboard LEDs.

My system details:
Ryzen 7 5800X3D
4070 Super
Corsair 750e PSU
ASRock B550M Steel Legend
32gb DDR4
G
gadi7
03-14-2024, 05:33 AM #1

Hello, my computer is behaving oddly and I'm unsure what to do. After spilling water on my desk, cleaning it up didn't help the situation. The PC won't boot properly now—when I press the power button it turns on, fans and lights work, but the monitor fails to display anything. The most puzzling part is that it stays on even when I try to shut it down. I only noticed a few small water spots, and it didn't react when I spilled more, so I don't think it's water damage. After several attempts, I'm seeing CPU and DRAM errors through the motherboard LEDs.

My system details:
Ryzen 7 5800X3D
4070 Super
Corsair 750e PSU
ASRock B550M Steel Legend
32gb DDR4

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_HardGamer_
Member
181
03-16-2024, 06:27 AM
#2
How much water are we using? It’s likely the water needed to reach it might have taken some time. You should never run a system if there’s a chance water is involved.
It might be necessary to remove components one by one and see if the system boots. I’ve had experience with a prebuilt gaming PC where the AIO started leaking, causing damage to the GPU and motherboard.
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_HardGamer_
03-16-2024, 06:27 AM #2

How much water are we using? It’s likely the water needed to reach it might have taken some time. You should never run a system if there’s a chance water is involved.
It might be necessary to remove components one by one and see if the system boots. I’ve had experience with a prebuilt gaming PC where the AIO started leaking, causing damage to the GPU and motherboard.

Z
Zacman13901
Member
55
03-16-2024, 07:04 AM
#3
I haven't located any water on the motherboard, though there were some tiny drops on the GPU backplate and the top of the PSU.
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Zacman13901
03-16-2024, 07:04 AM #3

I haven't located any water on the motherboard, though there were some tiny drops on the GPU backplate and the top of the PSU.