Kerry,
So if you are saying that I would probably be wasting my time in getting a
TechAid, what is a good way of determining the mobo or CPU is bad?
"Kerry Brown" <(E-Mail Removed)*o*m> wrote in message
news:Oz#(E-Mail Removed)...
> > Anyone know the symptoms of a dead mobo. I am having serious video
> > problems.
> > Nothing will display.
> > My onboard video will not work nor will a seperate AGP card.
> > Previously, my onboard was giving me fits, so I decided to throw in an
AGP
> > card. At first boot, it did not work, then the 2nd boot it went on.
> > After restarting once, it came on. The 2nd restart, the display did not
> > come
> > back on acting the same way as the onboard video did.
> > After several bootings, nothing came on.
> > My led and fans come on, but the display doesn't. I do not know how a
> > dead
> > mobo responds, but I am tempted to purchase a TechAid.
> >
> > Anyone have any suggestions?
> >
>
> Why don't you buy it and tell us if it works :-)
>
> Seriously, I have never found a low cost product that can detect a dead
> motherboard with absolute certainty. I doubt very much a $34.95 product
> will. There are too many variables in motherboard design for it to do much
> more than give you POST codes (if they are even available) and power
supply
> voltages. The equipment and training to use the equipment needed to
diagnose
> motherboard faults is far more than the cost of just stocking spare
parts.
> Why do you think shops charge for their service? They have to carry enough
> spare parts to substitute and use a methodology to diagnose PC problems.
> There are no short cuts.
>
> I realize you're just trying to save a dime. I'm not trying to give you
> grief but there is no easy fix that I know of. It sounds like a power
supply
> problem which may a bad power supply or some component drawing too much
> current causing the symptoms of a bad power supply. Disconnect all the
hard
> drives, CDROMS, floppy drive, USB devices, remove any network cards, 2nd
> video card, etc. Only have a keyboard, mouse and monitor hooked up. Start
> the computer. If you get nothing on your screen, try a known good power
> supply. If the display starts up then you have to power down, add one item
> back at a time and try again. If the display doesn't start up with a good
> power supply then you have a bad "mobo" or CPU.
>
> Kerry Brown
> KDB Systems
>
>
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