If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
ATX Power Supply Failure?
Hi,
My friend asked me to look at his PC which intermittently goes dead and sometimes starts up again. Had a look today and checked the following: power switch OK Mains cable and fuse OK Checked inside supply for poor connections/joints OK Put it back and it started pressed power switch and it stopped but would not start again. After several minutes I got it to go again but it stopped after about 10 seconds without touching button. Removed Power Supply and have it now working fine in my PC while sending this e-mail. The mother board in question is a Soyo, before deciding to replace M/B, can someone tell me how to check pin 14 on M/B power connector without it being powered up if possible? Thanks -- Peter Hemmings |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
If you have a 3.5 digit meter, or any vom for that matter, you
just measure the volts on 14 and 15(Ground). Should be less than 0.7 V. It is held low by the mobo after a momentary application of the power on switch. It can't be checked unless power is on, since the mobo has to be active to pull the line down. "Alan in Boise" wrote in message ... There is a power supply checker that hooks up to them for troubleshooting. I saw one several months back but don't recall where or how much. You hook up your power supply to it and it lets you know if things are ok or not. Alan in Boise "Peter Hemmings" wrote in message ... Hi, My friend asked me to look at his PC which intermittently goes dead and sometimes starts up again. Had a look today and checked the following: power switch OK Mains cable and fuse OK Checked inside supply for poor connections/joints OK Put it back and it started pressed power switch and it stopped but would not start again. After several minutes I got it to go again but it stopped after about 10 seconds without touching button. Removed Power Supply and have it now working fine in my PC while sending this e-mail. The mother board in question is a Soyo, before deciding to replace M/B, can someone tell me how to check pin 14 on M/B power connector without it being powered up if possible? Thanks -- Peter Hemmings |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Peter Hemmings wrote:
What is the supply being pulled down is it 5.5volts? To test an ATX PSU: First, disconnect everything from the power supply (including MB.) Plug AC cord into the rear of the PS. IF the PS has its own rocker on/off switch, turn it ON. There should be +5v on pin 9 of the 20 pin connector (+5vsb, usually a violet wire.) There should be 0.8v on pin 14 (PS-ON, usually a green wire.) This is from an internal pull-up to the +5vsb. Connect PS power leads to 1 or 2 IDE HDs (for a load). Jumper pin 14 (PS-ON) to pin 13 (ground, black wire.) At this point, fan in PS should start spinning, drives should spin, and + 5/12v, -5/12v, +3.3v, and +5vsb should be present at 20 pin connector. Disconnecting pin 14-13 jumper should turn supply back off. Further: When your system fails to start, what is the voltage on pin 9? If it is less than 4.75v, either a) the logic on your motherboard is shorting b) your +5vsb is under powered, or c) your PS is bad. It is most likely a combination of b) and c). If your +5vsb is OK, measure pin 14 of the PS/MB connector. If it is 0.8v (and the +5vsb is OK), the power supply should be on. If pin 14 is 0.8v, the +5vsb is OK, and the PS is OFF, the PS is bad. If pin 14 is 2.0v, the power supply is being told to stay OFF by the MB. If depressing the front panel ON/OFF switch does NOT lower pin 14 to 0.8v (and the +5vsb is OK), then the problem is NOT the power supply, but rather MB related. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
In message , Peter Hemmings
writes In message , ric writes Peter Hemmings wrote: What is the supply being pulled down is it 5.5volts? To test an ATX PSU: First, disconnect everything from the power supply (including MB.) Plug AC cord into the rear of the PS. IF the PS has its own rocker on/off switch, turn it ON. There should be +5v on pin 9 of the 20 pin connector (+5vsb, usually a violet wire.) There should be 0.8v on pin 14 (PS-ON, usually a green wire.) This is from an internal pull-up to the +5vsb. Connect PS power leads to 1 or 2 IDE HDs (for a load). Jumper pin 14 (PS-ON) to pin 13 (ground, black wire.) At this point, fan in PS should start spinning, drives should spin, and + 5/12v, -5/12v, +3.3v, and +5vsb should be present at 20 pin connector. Yep just checked on my PC with suspect PSU that there is 4.78volts on pin14 "pull-up" Disconnecting pin 14-13 jumper should turn supply back off. Yes I assume this is OK as I switched it on and off at least 15 times this afternoon and it was OK. Further: When your system fails to start, what is the voltage on pin 9? Will, check but will be Wednesday/Thursday and post results/conclusions for information. Just for information: Fault was due to power supply 5vsb being 4.19volts off load/on load. Took me longer than expected as it worked fine in my box! (my M/B obviously works with wider limits, just!) bought new PS and fitted. tested OK Noticed the new PS have what I assume to be a new HD connector (it also has a small square one as well as the normal ones). If it is less than 4.75v, either a) the logic on your motherboard is shorting OK b) your +5vsb is under powered, Unlikely as he has not got much in his machine. or c) your PS is bad. It is most likely a combination of b) and c). If your +5vsb is OK, measure pin 14 of the PS/MB connector. If it is 0.8v (and the +5vsb is OK), the power supply should be on. If pin 14 is 0.8v, the +5vsb is OK, and the PS is OFF, the PS is bad. If pin 14 is 2.0v, the power supply is being told to stay OFF by the MB. If depressing the front panel ON/OFF switch does NOT lower pin 14 to 0.8v (and the +5vsb is OK), then the problem is NOT the power supply, but rather MB related. This is (unfortunately) what my money is on! BTW do you know if this is a common fault or if APM of "Wake on LAN" settings could hold it off (just out of interest)? Thanks for your very explicit information. Thanks -- Peter Hemmings |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
That 4 pin extra connector is for P4 boards. It's an
additional 12V lead. "Peter Hemmings" wrote in message ... In message , Peter Hemmings writes In message , ric writes Peter Hemmings wrote: What is the supply being pulled down is it 5.5volts? To test an ATX PSU: First, disconnect everything from the power supply (including MB.) Plug AC cord into the rear of the PS. IF the PS has its own rocker on/off switch, turn it ON. There should be +5v on pin 9 of the 20 pin connector (+5vsb, usually a violet wire.) There should be 0.8v on pin 14 (PS-ON, usually a green wire.) This is from an internal pull-up to the +5vsb. Connect PS power leads to 1 or 2 IDE HDs (for a load). Jumper pin 14 (PS-ON) to pin 13 (ground, black wire.) At this point, fan in PS should start spinning, drives should spin, and + 5/12v, -5/12v, +3.3v, and +5vsb should be present at 20 pin connector. Yep just checked on my PC with suspect PSU that there is 4.78volts on pin14 "pull-up" Disconnecting pin 14-13 jumper should turn supply back off. Yes I assume this is OK as I switched it on and off at least 15 times this afternoon and it was OK. Further: When your system fails to start, what is the voltage on pin 9? Will, check but will be Wednesday/Thursday and post results/conclusions for information. Just for information: Fault was due to power supply 5vsb being 4.19volts off load/on load. Took me longer than expected as it worked fine in my box! (my M/B obviously works with wider limits, just!) bought new PS and fitted. tested OK Noticed the new PS have what I assume to be a new HD connector (it also has a small square one as well as the normal ones). If it is less than 4.75v, either a) the logic on your motherboard is shorting OK b) your +5vsb is under powered, Unlikely as he has not got much in his machine. or c) your PS is bad. It is most likely a combination of b) and c). If your +5vsb is OK, measure pin 14 of the PS/MB connector. If it is 0.8v (and the +5vsb is OK), the power supply should be on. If pin 14 is 0.8v, the +5vsb is OK, and the PS is OFF, the PS is bad. If pin 14 is 2.0v, the power supply is being told to stay OFF by the MB. If depressing the front panel ON/OFF switch does NOT lower pin 14 to 0.8v (and the +5vsb is OK), then the problem is NOT the power supply, but rather MB related. This is (unfortunately) what my money is on! BTW do you know if this is a common fault or if APM of "Wake on LAN" settings could hold it off (just out of interest)? Thanks for your very explicit information. Thanks -- Peter Hemmings |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
On Fri, 18 Jul 2003 18:46:30 +0100, Peter Hemmings pondered exceedingly, then
took quill in hand and carefully composed... | Just for information: | Fault was due to power supply 5vsb being 4.19volts off load/on load. | Took me longer than expected as it worked fine in my box! | (my M/B obviously works with wider limits, just!) | bought new PS and fitted. | tested OK | Noticed the new PS have what I assume to be a new HD connector (it also | has a small square one as well as the normal ones). The square plug is a 12v connector for a Pentium 4 board. Larc §§§ - Please raise temperature of mail to reply by e-mail - §§§ |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
In message , Larc
writes On Fri, 18 Jul 2003 18:46:30 +0100, Peter Hemmings pondered exceedingly, then took quill in hand and carefully composed... | Just for information: | Fault was due to power supply 5vsb being 4.19volts off load/on load. | Took me longer than expected as it worked fine in my box! | (my M/B obviously works with wider limits, just!) | bought new PS and fitted. | tested OK | Noticed the new PS have what I assume to be a new HD connector (it also | has a small square one as well as the normal ones). The square plug is a 12v connector for a Pentium 4 board. Thanks for the information Larc §§§ - Please raise temperature of mail to reply by e-mail - §§§ -- Peter Hemmings |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
my new mobo o/c's great | rockerrock | Overclocking AMD Processors | 9 | June 30th 04 08:17 PM |
help, please, with Compaq Presario power supply problem | Jacques Clouseau | General | 6 | June 9th 04 06:44 PM |
power supply, or ...? | ynotssor | General | 10 | June 1st 04 01:19 AM |
Computer doesnt start at all | Robin | General | 6 | January 11th 04 05:00 PM |
How can I make motherboard to restart after power loss automatically? | Amiran | General | 1 | September 24th 03 11:35 PM |