F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop It can cause significant damage.

It can cause significant damage.

It can cause significant damage.

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Sebluigi
Senior Member
727
03-15-2025, 09:09 AM
#1
I have an HP PC with a Core i5 6th generation, 8GB RAM, 512GB SSD, and Kali Linux installed. The power supply is clearly inadequate, frequently cutting out around eight times daily—most of these outages occur when the PC is active. I’m concerned about potential damage and want to understand what risks exist, especially since it doesn’t have a hard drive.
S
Sebluigi
03-15-2025, 09:09 AM #1

I have an HP PC with a Core i5 6th generation, 8GB RAM, 512GB SSD, and Kali Linux installed. The power supply is clearly inadequate, frequently cutting out around eight times daily—most of these outages occur when the PC is active. I’m concerned about potential damage and want to understand what risks exist, especially since it doesn’t have a hard drive.

K
KillSt3al
Member
113
03-15-2025, 09:35 AM
#2
I might receive a UPS, though it could be unnecessary. Someone should hopefully point me in the right direction.
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KillSt3al
03-15-2025, 09:35 AM #2

I might receive a UPS, though it could be unnecessary. Someone should hopefully point me in the right direction.

9
9Syzar6
Junior Member
25
03-16-2025, 07:51 PM
#3
Writing to the HDD/SSD while powering off can cause file corruption or data loss. Unless hardware damage is a concern, this is usually not a major problem for data integrity.
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9Syzar6
03-16-2025, 07:51 PM #3

Writing to the HDD/SSD while powering off can cause file corruption or data loss. Unless hardware damage is a concern, this is usually not a major problem for data integrity.

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Creepsone
Junior Member
23
03-16-2025, 09:08 PM
#4
It poses a greater risk to your data than to your physical device. Sudden power cuts aren't much different from what happens when your computer powers down. The operating system doesn't have time to properly save everything and secure itself. If your PC is actively saving a file during the outage, that file might become corrupted. Don't worry about losing progress—just resume from the last saved point. A UPS would be a wise investment for you.
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Creepsone
03-16-2025, 09:08 PM #4

It poses a greater risk to your data than to your physical device. Sudden power cuts aren't much different from what happens when your computer powers down. The operating system doesn't have time to properly save everything and secure itself. If your PC is actively saving a file during the outage, that file might become corrupted. Don't worry about losing progress—just resume from the last saved point. A UPS would be a wise investment for you.

W
137
03-18-2025, 12:53 AM
#5
We use nearly identical systems running Linux Mint on an HP EliteDesk. This particular model features an i7-4770 processor. Power interruptions aren't frequent here, though we've experienced some voltage drops elsewhere. Likely due to excessive heater usage from the cold weather, which caused overloads and tripped breakers. Data loss should remain low. Browsers usually recall previous sessions, and LibreOffice tends to save documents as they work. Hardware issues aren't a concern—I haven't encountered PSU failures in the last five years, and these units are around 10 years old. They were released in 2013.
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willowengstrom
03-18-2025, 12:53 AM #5

We use nearly identical systems running Linux Mint on an HP EliteDesk. This particular model features an i7-4770 processor. Power interruptions aren't frequent here, though we've experienced some voltage drops elsewhere. Likely due to excessive heater usage from the cold weather, which caused overloads and tripped breakers. Data loss should remain low. Browsers usually recall previous sessions, and LibreOffice tends to save documents as they work. Hardware issues aren't a concern—I haven't encountered PSU failures in the last five years, and these units are around 10 years old. They were released in 2013.