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PC broke
Created 23rd November 2012 @ 19:05
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Im on my phone atm since my pc is dead but you can find all my pc specs on my steam profile. What happend was that first i played assassins creed 3 and my pc just freezed so i shut it down. Then my DRAM_LED light was red so i went into my mobo manual and did the memOK test which didn’t work. 1h later i tried to turn on my pc and it worked. The error message was power supply surge was detected on last power on. And the my pc acted normal for some days so i didn’t give a shit but today when i played tf2 it freezed and this time the error message said overclocking failed (i haven’t overclocked my pc). And now it won’t start up. Any ideas? Cpu broken? Psu broken? My fans and components start up but keyboard, mouse and screen doesn’t work..
Cheers alba
Last edited by alba,
Have u tried to re-install windows?
Is your PC plugged in ?
– The I.T. guy
power surge probably broke your ram. ram’s easy n cheap so just replace it. if that doesnt work replace psu on top of it. theres no guarantee but this is 99% likely
Thanks for the replies. I tried 1 RAM stick at the time but it didnt work. Do you think warranty will cover it? The pc is 5 months old…
Restore the BIOS to default settings. See what happens.
How exactly did you reset BIOS? Did you clear CMOS via jumper?
Quoted from Le meme arrows
How exactly did you reset BIOS? Did you clear CMOS via jumper?
Yep, via the jumper
Quoted from alba
Thanks for the replies. I tried 1 RAM stick at the time but it didnt work. Do you think warranty will cover it? The pc is 5 months old…
According to the general laws concerning warranties in Europe, every seller of new products to consumers (end users) is obliged to give you a 2 year warranty. If the seller thinks that the problem was caused by something you did with the pc and not because of an error that was already present at the time you bought the product or at the time of production of it, he has to prove that you caused the breakdown by fiddling with your pc, … (the burden of proof, however, does shift: in the first 6 months after the sale the seller has to prove the error was not inherent to the product at the time of sale, after those 6 months you have to prove the error was already present at the time of sale)
I based this upon the law in Belgium, but I think the actual law concerning warranties and consumer protection was enforced by Europe so they should be similar throughout the EU.
So you should get your warranty if you didnt fiddle with your pc too much.
Last edited by Genmix,
Have you tried turning it off and on again?
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