![]() |
An older power suply is also likely to have accumulated a lot of dust, which usually cruddies up the fan bearings eventually, and make it noisy and/or fail.
|
Quote:
These problems were also demonstrated in tests in Tom's Hardware at http://www6.tomshardware.com/howto/0...021/index.html Quote:
Another spec missing from that crappy supply. It has no overpower protection. At full power, the supply may instead self destruct - destroying with it the disk drive, its data, the motherboard, etc. Catastrophic failure directly traceable to the human who failed to learn basic and simple computer concepts. Failure that even Tom's Hardware demonstrates way too common in clone power supplies. Power supply in the original post may be a classic example. But we cannot know until the 3.5 digit multimeter has provided necessary numbers. |
Quote:
|
Jaguar, I have
Jag,
I've seen it happen with servers. It's especially prevalent with the cheaper power supplies. My friend who owns a web hosting company (burst.net) has literally thousands of servers in place, so we have a representative sample :). We have seen PS's from multiple vendors completely blow out motherboards, or fry certain components. It's more common than we'd like to think. TW is right. If you have machines where the PS runs in a bad way, it will cause major issues. Mitch |
hmm ok, I'll take your word on it, maybe these ones had some kind of protection after all. I couldn't get burst.net to load, maybe his PSU has blown.
|
that's www.burst.net :)
And I just loaded the site fine. No, his PSU didn't blow out there. He uses good ones since he hates paying for replacements.
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 09:43 AM. |
Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.