F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Issue arises unexpectedly.

Issue arises unexpectedly.

Issue arises unexpectedly.

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DraGonX541
Member
189
12-25-2024, 10:20 PM
#1
This week Tuesday my computer was functioning perfectly, but Thursday I encountered a black screen. After checking all connections multiple times, the issue persisted. My monitor worked with Xbox, running barebones didn’t help. A new power supply also failed to resolve the problem. After replacing the CMOS battery, it still didn’t boot and no BIOS screen appeared. Could the motherboard or CPU be faulty? Any further tests needed?
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DraGonX541
12-25-2024, 10:20 PM #1

This week Tuesday my computer was functioning perfectly, but Thursday I encountered a black screen. After checking all connections multiple times, the issue persisted. My monitor worked with Xbox, running barebones didn’t help. A new power supply also failed to resolve the problem. After replacing the CMOS battery, it still didn’t boot and no BIOS screen appeared. Could the motherboard or CPU be faulty? Any further tests needed?

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FelipeV774
Junior Member
2
12-25-2024, 11:53 PM
#2
The answer is yes, this could be a possibility. Would you like to try using another computer? The most effective approach is to test each part individually on another system until you identify the issue, or if components are limited, isolate them starting with the CPU, motherboard, and RAM. If you can't use another machine, remove all parts except the CPU, motherboard, and RAM, then attempt to boot from just those. Running it will reveal if a major component is faulty. A detailed spec list would be very useful. Good luck!
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FelipeV774
12-25-2024, 11:53 PM #2

The answer is yes, this could be a possibility. Would you like to try using another computer? The most effective approach is to test each part individually on another system until you identify the issue, or if components are limited, isolate them starting with the CPU, motherboard, and RAM. If you can't use another machine, remove all parts except the CPU, motherboard, and RAM, then attempt to boot from just those. Running it will reveal if a major component is faulty. A detailed spec list would be very useful. Good luck!