>On an ATX MOBO you have two power switch pins to which the case on/off
>switch is connected. It must be connected and the on/off switch
>toggled in order for the PSU to run.
>I can just put a jumper on the two pins, but the PSU doesn't seem to
>want to run.
If you short the pins and leave the jumper on, the machines should power up for
a few seconds then shut off again (same as holding the power button in when you
turn it on). If you short the pins and remove the jumper once it starts, it
should stay running. (same as pressing and releasing the power button).
>So I am wondering - what is actually happening in simple terms? Is
>one of the two pins 'hot', and does the case switch 'pass' current via
>the connector to the second pin or what? Or does the case switch have
>the current and pass it to both MOBO pins?
The switch is just a momentary action switch.. all it does is shorts the two
pins while you're holding it, and disconnects them as soon as you let go of the
button (ie. nothing special or fancy there). One pin is ground, the other is
PS_ON, which carries a small voltage and is connected to the PSU circuitry (via
the green wire) to turn it on while it's shorted to ground (I'm not sure of
exactly how it does this).
The mainboard has a simple circuit that keeps the PS_ON wire shorted to ground
once you press the button briefly (this is so you don't need to hold the button
in).
If you want to fire up an ATX psu without connection to a motherboard, you just
need to short the green wire to any of the black wires, or the metal casing
(you'll want to put some kind of load on it first though, such as a hdd, cdrom,
etc).
Hope this helps you understand a little more..
Regards,
Chris
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