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ATX power-tester

 
 
William J. Lunsford
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      28th Apr 2005
I have a PC Power & Cooling ATX Power-Tester. Can that be used on an ATX
power supply with the extra P4 12V connector to the motherboard? If so, do
you leave the 12V connector attached to the motherboard during testing?


 
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River_Rat
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      28th Apr 2005
If this device requires you to unplug the 20 pin connector from the MB to
test the PS I would also unplug the P4 12v connection. I am not familiar
with this PS tester and would need to read the owners manual.

--
Good Day
River Rat




"William J. Lunsford" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:v3cce.1623$(E-Mail Removed)...
I have a PC Power & Cooling ATX Power-Tester. Can that be used on an ATX
power supply with the extra P4 12V connector to the motherboard? If so, do
you leave the 12V connector attached to the motherboard during testing?



 
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William J. Lunsford
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      29th Apr 2005
Thank you for your reply. You do have to unplug the 20-pin connector from
the motherboard and plug it into the device. A green light indicates the
power supply is OK. The only instructions I have are printed right on the
device. There is nothing about a 12v P4 connector. I looked, but I could not
find any information on the PC Power & Cooling site where this device is
sold.

"River_Rat" <nospam@nospam> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> If this device requires you to unplug the 20 pin connector from the MB to
> test the PS I would also unplug the P4 12v connection. I am not familiar
> with this PS tester and would need to read the owners manual.
>
> --
> Good Day
> River Rat
>
>
>
>
> "William J. Lunsford" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:v3cce.1623$(E-Mail Removed)...
> I have a PC Power & Cooling ATX Power-Tester. Can that be used on an ATX
> power supply with the extra P4 12V connector to the motherboard? If so, do
> you leave the 12V connector attached to the motherboard during testing?
>
>
>



 
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River_Rat
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      29th Apr 2005
You are Welcome

You can also test the PS with a standard VOM set on DC voltage.

--
Good Day
River Rat




"William J. Lunsford" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:XMfce.1056$(E-Mail Removed)...
Thank you for your reply. You do have to unplug the 20-pin connector from
the motherboard and plug it into the device. A green light indicates the
power supply is OK. The only instructions I have are printed right on the
device. There is nothing about a 12v P4 connector. I looked, but I could not
find any information on the PC Power & Cooling site where this device is
sold.

"River_Rat" <nospam@nospam> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> If this device requires you to unplug the 20 pin connector from the MB to
> test the PS I would also unplug the P4 12v connection. I am not familiar
> with this PS tester and would need to read the owners manual.
>
> --
> Good Day
> River Rat
>
>
>
>
> "William J. Lunsford" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:v3cce.1623$(E-Mail Removed)...
> I have a PC Power & Cooling ATX Power-Tester. Can that be used on an ATX
> power supply with the extra P4 12V connector to the motherboard? If so, do
> you leave the 12V connector attached to the motherboard during testing?
>
>
>




 
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Jim Macklin
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Posts: n/a
 
      29th Apr 2005
But you still need a dummy load to turn the power supply ON.
Antec makes a nice tester that makes using a DVM easy.


"River_Rat" <nospam@nospam> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
| You are Welcome
|
| You can also test the PS with a standard VOM set on DC
voltage.
|
| --
| Good Day
| River Rat
|
|
|
|
| "William J. Lunsford" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
message
| news:XMfce.1056$(E-Mail Removed)...
| Thank you for your reply. You do have to unplug the 20-pin
connector from
| the motherboard and plug it into the device. A green light
indicates the
| power supply is OK. The only instructions I have are
printed right on the
| device. There is nothing about a 12v P4 connector. I
looked, but I could not
| find any information on the PC Power & Cooling site where
this device is
| sold.
|
| "River_Rat" <nospam@nospam> wrote in message
| news:(E-Mail Removed)...
| > If this device requires you to unplug the 20 pin
connector from the MB to
| > test the PS I would also unplug the P4 12v connection. I
am not familiar
| > with this PS tester and would need to read the owners
manual.
| >
| > --
| > Good Day
| > River Rat
| >
| >
| >
| >
| > "William J. Lunsford" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
message
| > news:v3cce.1623$(E-Mail Removed)...
| > I have a PC Power & Cooling ATX Power-Tester. Can that
be used on an ATX
| > power supply with the extra P4 12V connector to the
motherboard? If so, do
| > you leave the 12V connector attached to the motherboard
during testing?
| >
| >
| >
|
|
|


 
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