I'll go through those steps in the next few days. Thank you.-AC80- said:1. attempt to enter your BIOS (please google for more info) look around temps, and you boot options.
2.if 1 fails open case and clean including the CPU and GPU coolers
3. if 2 is clean check RAM if it is securly in
4. if 3 is secure attempt a boot up off another HDD from a diffrent computer
5. if 4 fails you have isolated it to be your defective machine and NOT you HDD, now comes the expensive bit:
5.1, your cpu is fine and you GPU is fine and your RAM.
5.2, you need to cheak you PSU
5.3, your mobo MAY have a problem but dont rule it out (transisors and capasitors)
5.4, check your cpu cooler is it on right?
5.5, check all cable-ling
5.6, check BIOS for faults or any possible upgrades available online
6. if everything is above in 5.2 to 5.6 is ok, test your HDD then the back up if that still fails please see 6.
6. GIVE UP and take it to a pro/scrap it.
edit:after re-reading this and hearing that you managed to enter your OS means that it is most likely a temp issue/precaution you bios has shut you down because a component is overheating, due to the shout amount of time you spent since pressing the on button. Have you moved you computer around recently or heard a wired noise and is it cooled by the intel stock cooler ps that is THE DEVIL to overclokers. this is the most likly error but it could be others.SnipErlite said:Picture the scene: I turn on my computer today hoping for another good evening of gaming, and around a minute after I do so, just as I'm logging on, it just shuts off randomly. Check the power light and it's flashing amber, instead of a nice solid green. Uh oh.
This happens every time I switch it on (along with a message saying files on my C: drive have to be checked, checking right now blah blah blah....this happens now and then and ordinarily it checks all the files and we go on as normal so I'm not worried about that).
Have a quick google and various answers pop up. Also the Dell website (it's a Dell Dimension 8400) suggests having a look at the diagnostic lights on the back. These 4 lights apparently can help you work out what the fault is depending on what combination of green and yellow they display. However while booting up they flicker between green and yellow really fast. Then decide on steady green on all 4 (which indicates there's no fault) about 20 seconds before the whole thing fails.
Now my main question is, does anyone have any idea what's wrong with my beloved PC? Has anyone else had this problem and found a fix?
Has..........has my favorite gaming system finally broken?
=(
ps every one remember this check-list above it may help YOU!
Also nah I haven't moved it about or anything, this was completely unexpected. One day it works perfectly fine, the next this. Also as vf501 said no I'm not overclocking.
Well that disk check thing never seems to coincide with any change I've made on the computer or any new software or hardware. It just appears occasionally and has never caused a problem.tahrey said:1. It's a Dell...
2. That mention of the disk check thing happening "now and again" is NOT a good sign. I think that's happened a grand total of maybe once... twice? in the ~4 years I've had the laptop I'm typing on, both times after what amounted to collosal handling or driver upgrade fuckups (one other or both). NT flavours of windows just don't suffer the problems that cause that reaction anywhere near as much as 9x did unless there's something inherently broken with them. A healthy computer in normal use I'd expect to NEVER see it.
Things that are typical of causing this sort of thing:
* Dodgy memory, particularly if it's in a part of the map where windows likes to load into. It goes there, gets corrupted, and poof - lockup.
* Bad hard disk, whether from manufacture or mistreatment. Some of those custom cases put the disk in ludicrous positions that are ripe for it badly overheating. And brand PCs like that often use cheap and nasty disks, like the lower-end Western Digitals or Seagates (as opposed to, say, a Barracuda) that appear to be made out of wadded-up tissue paper.
* CPU fan failing or CPU-heatsink assembly becoming detached. The latter shouldn't be common any more given how well-secured they tend to be, and the former shouldn't give all so much trouble, though. OLD processors would have just smoked and died. Certain previous generations progressed to having safety cut outs that killed the power at a certain temperature (before it could enter "thermal runaway", ie Halt and Catch Fire). More modern and sophisticated versions of this step the processing speed way down as the temperature approaches critical. You may end up only running at like 200mhz instead of 3200, but it will still sort of work (instead of crashing/resetting) and won't cook itself to death.
* Iffy power supply. If that starts malfunctioning, particularly under load, the rest of the machine also gets sick. (including suffering errors that could be suspected as memory or disk at first, as those parts could be directly affected)
* Pernicious malware buggering your files up bad enough to require the disk check then make the machine hang.
Anywayup the diagnosis is going to require time, confidence with computer innards, spares and experimentation. I'd start gently by downloading and making use of memtest86+. Watch it for the first few minutes, then le it run at least an hour. If the machine runs that long without crashing, that's a good start; without crashing or any errors being flagged, then it's probably not the RAM.
If it does give errors, try removing a stick (or bank) at a time and seeing where the problem does and doesnt occur. And as MT86+ runs off external storage, you can probably discount hard disk problems if it DOES hang/reset during the tests. Unplug the disk completely to be sure. You can make sure the CPU fan's spinning at the same time.
Whip the disk out and put it in a USB enclosure or use one of those fancy disk-dock thingies to run a full virus and malware scan on it unsing a different machine.
In fact just try booting it at all off any suitable external media... crash = its not the disk that's at fault... and now i'm literally falling asleep at keyboard so this needs to hand off to someone else.
Also I would download memtest86+ only I can't even logon, let alone download something. If I exist the disk test (not recommended apparently but oh well) then I can logon for about 5 seconds. Then *poof* it dies.