It had been getting a tad slow after extended use lately and then yesterday wouldn't turn on. I gave up, and about thirty minutes later it magically comes on. (It shuts down perfectly fine.) Today I tried turning it on. Got nothing. Tried a few times; still nothing. Tried a few times an hour or so later, then I gave up again. Six hours later it came on of its own accord.

Specs:

CPU: AMD 2800+

Video card: Radeon 7200. (Ouch!)

Ram: 512MB.

OS: Windows XP.

No idea about the motherboard and the PSU. Which is probably what's relevant here.

Posted by Foolz Fri, 18 Mar 2011 09:35:40 (comments: 20)
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Fri, 18 Mar 2011 12:46:56
Wouldn't start at all (no fans starting, power light, etc.) or just failed to load Windows?
 
Fri, 18 Mar 2011 20:39:22

If you are talking about not turning on at all.  Like you press the power button and nothing happens I suggest plugging the computer directly into the wall instead of a power strip as a troubleshooting move (use a different outlet entirely).  It could either be a faulty power-strip, faulty outlet or a bad power supply in the computer itself.

If it is powering up but not loading windows you could try starting it in safe mode (tap F8 repeatedly just after it turns on) and go from there.

 
Fri, 18 Mar 2011 21:18:10
I've had a machine where the connector to the power button itself was an issue.
 
Fri, 18 Mar 2011 23:47:00

Not turning on at all. Tried another plug; still no difference. Will try a different outlet, but it doesn't appear to be an issue with the outlet.

Someone suggested that the ram might not be connected properly; could that cause a problem like that? not sure how the ram could dislodge itself, though!

Thanks for the tips so far!

 
Sat, 19 Mar 2011 01:29:30
If the RAM was unseated it would turn on, making a beeping noise and not proceed.

Take the case off, and just make sure all the wires are well connected.  Blow out any dust off the proc or anywhere else.  

Do you by any cahnce turn off the power at the wall or on the power strip when you are done with the computer? Or like a normal person do you just power down the computer and walk away?

It sounds like you need a new power supply, an easy and cheap thing to replace.  If you are not confident in doing it yourself take it to one of those small PC places, you'll likely get away with a fix for under $200 AU.
 
Sat, 19 Mar 2011 01:31:12
But also judging by the amount of RAM and OS, you may just take this opportunity to get a new computer.  Harvey norman has a sale item of a laptop for $249 right now.
 
Sat, 19 Mar 2011 01:38:39

Your PSU is dying.

 
Sat, 19 Mar 2011 01:48:08
aspro said:
But also judging by the amount of RAM and OS, you may just take this opportunity to get a new computer.  Harvey norman has a sale item of a laptop for $249 right now.

If you pay for it. Nyaa

Wait, laptop? Nevermind, I'd rather use a 486.

 
Sat, 19 Mar 2011 01:54:48

NP, just trying to help. Anyway, do all that other stuff I said.

 
Sat, 19 Mar 2011 02:31:49

Sorry if that came across as being obnoxious, didn't mean it to! Thanks again mate. Happy

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