Would heat be the big issue or hardware failure if my computer is
randomly turning off for no reason?
Could be either. Do you know the operating range of your processor and have aI think I would likely need to try Speccy. I also downgraded the
way to check it's current temp?
Would heat be the big issue or hardware failure if my computer is
randomly turning off for no reason?
Would heat be the big issue or hardware failure if my computer is
randomly turning off for no reason?
Would heat be the big issue or hardware failure if my computer is
randomly turning off for no reason?
there is a good chance that it's over heating, try moving it to a cooler spot or add a fan.
1st thing I would do though is un plug it pull off side panels and take it outside, then I would use my air compresser to blow out all the dust bunnies. or canned air would also work.
you could also go into bios and see what your CPU temp is.
there is a good chance that it's over heating, try moving it to a
cooler spot or add a fan.
1st thing I would do though is un plug it pull off side panels and
take it outside, then I would use my air compresser to blow out all
the dust bunnies. or canned air would also work.
you could also go into bios and see what your CPU temp is.
for years i just used to have a boxfan on my computers. now i just have a real good computer and video card that doesnt fucking overheat.
My computer is right by the central air duct in my Den, I do take it and blow it out occasionally I am thinking about gettin a new motherboard cpu mem combo this PC is getting old and I need something that will rip my DVD'd to MKV faster, right now it takes 3 hours per DVD.
motherboard cpu mem combo this PC is getting old and I need something
that will rip my DVD'd to MKV faster, right now it takes 3 hours per
DVD.
Just curious: what software do you use for ripping DVDs?
digital man
With the right CPU and graphics card its supposed to rip a DVD to MKV or MP4 in 15 minutes, but my setup was bought in like 2005 so its out dated for the video stuff.
In addition to what Digital Man said, a bad power supply can cause it too.Is there a way to test a power supply?
Matthew Munson wrote to DEEPTHAW <=-
@VIA: VERT/IUTOPIA
In addition to what Digital Man said, a bad power supply can cause it too.
Is there a way to test a power supply?
With the right CPU and graphics card its supposed to rip a DVD to MKV
or MP4 in 15 minutes, but my setup was bought in like 2005 so its out
dated for the video stuff.
i doubt it could rip and encode a dvd into a format that looks good in 15 mins.
In addition to what Digital Man said, a bad power supply can cause it too.Is there a way to test a power supply?
you never posted your temps.63C
Is there a way to test a power supply?
you never posted your temps.63C
you never posted your temps.63C
i7-3700
you never posted your temps.63C
i7-3700
Re: Computer randomly turning
By: Matthew Munson to MRO on Sun Jul 09 2017 11:38 am
you never posted your temps.63C
i7-3700
Actually I just googled temps for the i7 its a little high.
Mro wrote to Denn Gray <=-
he probably needs to clean off his thermal paste and apply some new
stuff.
but he probably has a hw problem that is causing the rebooting. he
needs to trouble shoot.
Overheating CPU.
Faulty RAM.
Faulty power supply.
I have also seen a faulty motherboard do it too.
Mro wrote to Denn Gray <=-
he probably needs to clean off his thermal paste and apply some new stuff.
but he probably has a hw problem that is causing the rebooting. he needs to trouble shoot.
The top 3 culprits for random reboots that I've seen are:
Overheating CPU.
Faulty RAM.
Faulty power supply.
I have also seen a faulty motherboard do it too.
James Maddeaux wrote to Vk3jed <=-
Sorry to jump on your thread! Overheating CPU, alot of times cleaning
the old Thermal Paste off the heatsink and CPU & reapplying will work !
=) (I prefer arctic silver)
Mro wrote to Vk3jed <=-
i've had bad memory a few times, and that just caused crazy random corruption shit to happen.
Related - mismatched RAM can also cause instability. I've found it easiest to buy all of my RAM at once from the same source. On the occasions I've later added RAM to a system, I've found the odds of incompatibility to be high. As a resuly, when buying a new system, I go for as much RAM as I can afford, then never touch it.
Nightfox wrote to Vk3jed <=-
If I'm adding RAM, I usually make sure I buy the same brand and type to match my existing RAM. I haven't had many issues..
that's a little hot but not bad. is that WHILE gaming?Its while gaming. And i run an amd 480 as my gpu.
i have an i7 7700 and it's min 32.5 max 54.5c
not gaming right now.
crappy gforce 1050ti is 27c
Actually I just googled temps for the i7 its a little high.I think it flares up when I play Final Fantasy 14.
"... ASCII stupid question - get a stupid ANSI"
that's a little hot but not bad. is that WHILE gaming?
i have an i7 7700 and it's min 32.5 max 54.5c
not gaming right now.
crappy gforce 1050ti is 27cIts while gaming. And i run an amd 480 as my gpu.
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