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?
>
>
>
|