​Be sure to actually test the power supply.  I've had servers that 'powered up' that didn't really.  ​

-- JD Austin
Voice: 480.269.4335 (480 2MY Geek)
jd@twingeckos.com



On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 6:01 AM, Stephen Partington <cryptworks@gmail.com> wrote:
I have had very poor experience with the technical knowledge at fry's electronics. Data doctors is good but pricy. 

Some things you can try is pull all components except CPU and the rest the bios. If you get beeps your board is not 100% gone.
The add one stick ram and video. If you still get beeps try another stick of ram. If you still get beeps but no post try an alternate graphics card or see about testing it in another machine.

CPU fail rates are ridiculously low but not impossible. After that go round you can try pulling it along with everything else and give it one more try empty and see if there is a beep code.

Then final step would be for try an alternate power supply. I have seen them go bad and not give the right power to the core so it comes up but never all the way.

Hope this helps.


On Monday, April 21, 2014, AZ Pete <plug@cactusfamily.com> wrote:
Hi All,

I'm having serious hardware issues with my main dev box and it is now completely down.
It's a fairly high end custom system (RAID, custom cooling, etc) that I built myself and has been quite stable for several years.
The box powers up and the LEDs on the motherboard light. But it never reaches POST.
The M/B has an LED that displays the boot hex codes on the board as it goes thru POST. Nothing is being displayed.
I've tried pulling out the video card and disconnecting all the peripherals, but that didn't help.

I'm thinking that the motherboard may be the problem.
I'd like to take it in for service to have it properly diagnosed. Does anyone know of any good hardware repair places in town?
I was thinking of Data Doctors, but don't know if they are capable to handle something that is not from a major manufacturer.
Is Fry's Electronics any good?

Any help would be most appreciated. And the faster the better. :)

Thanks for your help.
Peter




--
A mouse trap, placed on top of your alarm clock, will prevent you from rolling over and going back to sleep after you hit the snooze button.

Stephen



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