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as rock problem

I had a win power psu. It should have been more than enough watts and amps, after 2 months i smelt burning and the power went out. I bought a proper PSU now.
 
well the original psu i had was in my computer for 5 yrs i upgraded the motherboard then a month later when i had money i brought a new 6 core processor now i just brought a 650w psu im just wondering if the motherboard could be faulty if my computer keeps turning off
 
well the original psu i had was in my computer for 5 yrs i upgraded the motherboard then a month later when i had money i brought a new 6 core processor now i just brought a 650w psu im just wondering if the motherboard could be faulty if my computer keeps turning off

It could be the motherboard but the PSU's you've used haven't exactly ruled them out as a problem.

You've gone from a 1.8GHz (dual core?) processor to a 6 core 2.8GHz processor. That's going to require more power.

If you had bought a decent PSU instead of that Win Power thing then that would have either cured the problem or at least eliminated the PSU from the equation.

Cheap PSU's and top end hardware don't go well together.

And you still haven't told us the full specification of your PC.
 
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well weather its a £1 psu or £1000 its still kicking out the same watts im going to try taking memory out to rule that out and if its not that then there must be static on the motherboard i know its not the cpu i have upgraded the psu (obviously not a expensive one but it kicks the same power out ) i will also try disconecting dvd rw to rule that out but i think it could be the motherboard which only costs £30
 
well weather its a £1 psu or £1000 its still kicking out the same watts

No it isn't.

These cheap PSU's are well known for not supplying their stated wattage before blowing up.

Like I said it could be other things but you can't rule out the PSU.

Custom PC tested a £22 600W PSU. At 50% load (300W) the voltage on the 12V rail dropped to 11.03V, way below the ATX specification, and this would cause the PC to crash.

When trying to draw the full 600W from the PSU it refused to power up at all and started to emit a foul smell.

You've obviously got more faith in your £20 PSU than anyone else would have.

You've decided to go your own way so good luck with it.
 
well weather its a £1 psu or £1000 its still kicking out the same watts

but not all watts are created equal.

A modern PC requires a high ampage on the 12v power rail. It doesn't need a lot of ampage on the 3 or 5 v power rails. Unfortunately, getting high amps on the low voltage rails is rather cheap, so crap PSUs will have huge amps on those rails and very few on the 12v rail.

So, you've bought a PSU that is great at running hard drives, but not good enough to run your CPU.

And let's not forget the damage that a cheap PSU cn cause when it blows..
 
The 1055t you bought from overclockers is a 95w one? Because they only sell it as part of a bundle or full system.

What graphics card are you using?
 
In all fairness I don't think it's the PSU... I can't see bejewelled on Facebook maxing out his PSU causing 2 different PSU's to die (Although I do agree a good PSU is essential)

I used to work at a place that sold xpower PSU's, and they seemed not too bad, obviously not the best but I built plenty systems with them without a problem
 
I really don't understand why people skimp on psu's. It's like buying a ferrari then opting to stick a fords fiesta engine in it. The PSU should be your first and most serious consideration and work your way back from there.

** I wish to add there's nothing wrong with fiesta engines. I merely state that to draw an analogy.
 
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well i have taken out the memory and replaced them with different one and have also unplugged the dvd drive but it still does switch off it is the 95w cpu and it does mainly do it when playing bejeweled which does not take up much power i use my dvd drive all day but it does not switch itself off even though the dvd drive and the cpu are constantly working it would do in very rarly but it does it all the time when playing bejeweled so i do not think its the psu the graphics is built on to the motherboard its got 4 gb ram so i do think its the motherboard at fault
 
i can safely say , and by no means am i a expert maybe once i was but i have been out the loop for a while pentium II and AMD K6 chips were my glory days. That you my friend dont have a clue take these guys advice they know what they are on about.
 
i have got hold of a psu tester the readings were as follow
+5v=5.3v
+12v1=12.4v
+3v=3.4v
-12v=12.1v
+12v2=12.4v
5vsb=5.2
pg=320ms
so there for the psu is running fine

The voltage when not under load is irrelevant.

The fact that the 12V rails are within specification when not under load is irrelevant (though some are quite a way out from what you would expect on a quality PSU).

It's how many amps can be produced on those rails and what happens to the voltage as the output increases.

With cheap PSU's the voltage can soon drop as the load increases.
 
well i have taken out the memory and replaced them with different one and have also unplugged the dvd drive but it still does switch off it is the 95w cpu and it does mainly do it when playing bejeweled which does not take up much power i use my dvd drive all day but it does not switch itself off even though the dvd drive and the cpu are constantly working it would do in very rarly but it does it all the time when playing bejeweled so i do not think its the psu the graphics is built on to the motherboard its got 4 gb ram so i do think its the motherboard at fault

You should really use some form of punctuation and capitalisation. It's fairly difficult to read your posts.

I'm not having a go, I just feel you're likely to get more help that way.
 
But, you can now SAFELY discount the PSU being an issue.

What are you using to monitor the temperatures? Can you test your RAM in another computer? Test the CPU in another computer? This will discount those things mostly...
 
It is possible the MB, but it could still be the PSU, the symptoms certainly sound power related. Do you have a friend with another PSU you can try?
 
Ooops, didn't read the entire thread. My bad. Anyway, at least you have a decent PSU now, even though it didn't fix the problem it certainly wasn't a waste of money.
 
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