F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Power supply failure combined with smoking parts.

Power supply failure combined with smoking parts.

Power supply failure combined with smoking parts.

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starshine357
Junior Member
2
07-10-2016, 05:48 AM
#1
Hello everyone, welcome to my first post—sorry if it doesn’t fit in the right place or appears elsewhere! My computer suddenly stopped working and there was smoke coming from the graphics card (980Ti). The card also had a bright red glow right under the GPU. I thought it might be dead, so I took it out and restarted the system. After that, smoke started coming from the 2x4 ATX power connector next to the CPU. Now I’m pretty sure the power supply unit is the culprit, maybe because it was sending too many volts. I’m wondering if this means my CPU or other parts are damaged. If I replace the PSU, should I be worried about losing my CPU or other components? Thanks!
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starshine357
07-10-2016, 05:48 AM #1

Hello everyone, welcome to my first post—sorry if it doesn’t fit in the right place or appears elsewhere! My computer suddenly stopped working and there was smoke coming from the graphics card (980Ti). The card also had a bright red glow right under the GPU. I thought it might be dead, so I took it out and restarted the system. After that, smoke started coming from the 2x4 ATX power connector next to the CPU. Now I’m pretty sure the power supply unit is the culprit, maybe because it was sending too many volts. I’m wondering if this means my CPU or other parts are damaged. If I replace the PSU, should I be worried about losing my CPU or other components? Thanks!

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Mario_512
Member
163
07-10-2016, 07:49 AM
#2
It seems you might have damaged other parts as well, especially if there was smoke involved. The PSU appears to be decent quality, so you might be eligible for a refund under warranty. It’s unclear whether Corsair would reimburse the cost of your components.
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Mario_512
07-10-2016, 07:49 AM #2

It seems you might have damaged other parts as well, especially if there was smoke involved. The PSU appears to be decent quality, so you might be eligible for a refund under warranty. It’s unclear whether Corsair would reimburse the cost of your components.

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FRANDC_BR
Member
162
07-10-2016, 03:43 PM
#3
Yes, I connected the cables provided with the PSU, the graphics card used PCIe 6+2 pins, and the CPU used 4+4 pin cables.
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FRANDC_BR
07-10-2016, 03:43 PM #3

Yes, I connected the cables provided with the PSU, the graphics card used PCIe 6+2 pins, and the CPU used 4+4 pin cables.

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BluRamzy
Member
166
07-10-2016, 04:21 PM
#4
Your GPU and motherboard are likely damaged, though the CPU could still be intact. You might want to file a warranty claim for the power supply unit—this could extend coverage to other parts if the policy allows.
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BluRamzy
07-10-2016, 04:21 PM #4

Your GPU and motherboard are likely damaged, though the CPU could still be intact. You might want to file a warranty claim for the power supply unit—this could extend coverage to other parts if the policy allows.

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MrEvan88
Member
114
07-10-2016, 04:37 PM
#5
Thank you for your prompt replies. The PC is eight years old, and the store where I purchased the parts is no longer in operation. I also question whether I still have the original invoices. It seems like a forced upgrade and a fresh setup might be the best option.
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MrEvan88
07-10-2016, 04:37 PM #5

Thank you for your prompt replies. The PC is eight years old, and the store where I purchased the parts is no longer in operation. I also question whether I still have the original invoices. It seems like a forced upgrade and a fresh setup might be the best option.

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162
07-10-2016, 06:23 PM
#6
Sorry, I don't know if the PC has been completely fine so far.
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Oreos_In_Cream
07-10-2016, 06:23 PM #6

Sorry, I don't know if the PC has been completely fine so far.

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xAPPLExPIEx
Senior Member
657
07-10-2016, 06:56 PM
#7
You might still have a chance to get a warranty on the PSU. Just provide the part number and serial number from the device, which should be printed there. I'm not certain if you need anything additional, but I'm open to being wrong.
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xAPPLExPIEx
07-10-2016, 06:56 PM #7

You might still have a chance to get a warranty on the PSU. Just provide the part number and serial number from the device, which should be printed there. I'm not certain if you need anything additional, but I'm open to being wrong.

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Hidekih
Posting Freak
849
07-10-2016, 10:13 PM
#8
I'll take the figures from the unit and try it out. Hopefully, they'll recognize it as a warranty acceptance!
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Hidekih
07-10-2016, 10:13 PM #8

I'll take the figures from the unit and try it out. Hopefully, they'll recognize it as a warranty acceptance!

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dameste59ru
Member
73
07-17-2016, 11:06 PM
#9
It's been smooth until the past month when it suddenly stopped and lost the boot drive. I discovered driver and software problems that seemed to be the cause. Looking back, it was the power supply unit that was actually the issue, even though there were no signs at the time pointing to it.
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dameste59ru
07-17-2016, 11:06 PM #9

It's been smooth until the past month when it suddenly stopped and lost the boot drive. I discovered driver and software problems that seemed to be the cause. Looking back, it was the power supply unit that was actually the issue, even though there were no signs at the time pointing to it.

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Machi_Gamz
Member
204
07-18-2016, 02:28 AM
#10
These situations occur frequently and are disappointing.
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Machi_Gamz
07-18-2016, 02:28 AM #10

These situations occur frequently and are disappointing.

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