I was browsing the Internet/magic online store when out of the blue my computer shut off more or less. My monitor went dark however my computer was still well, on. I did a hard restart and the same thing. The computer powered on seemingly fine yet nothing popped up in my monitor. I've tried restarting/turning off the computer about five times now all with the same result. I opened up my case to see if anything jumped out at me as odd. Everything seemed in order, no fires, bears or lose cables. I am a bit worried seeing as how with the old problem i could still use my computer and with this one i can not.
The bellow us the first problem I had when i started this thread. Figured is would be better than starting a new thread just to retype some of this. Anyway, hope you guys can help!
The title just about says it all. My pc hates staying on while I am playing games. Let it be starcraft 2 beta, world of warcraft, or hell even football manager, after about 10 or some minutes it will shut off.
There is a plot twist however.
The computer does shut off however the fans stay running and i have to actually manually turn of the computer in order to restart it/turn it back on. That's really the only odd thing about this whole thing. Its been happening on and off for a while, at first i thought it was my video card, so i bought a new one. Then in some random thought i assumed maybe i needed more ram (lololol) and upgraded from 4 to 8gigs. No good, still happening. A part of me kinda thought it might be over heating since it happens most often when the ac isn't on and its about 80 inside. It happened many times today with it being around 75 inside with cool air blowing around.
I come to you PA, what more can i do? What could it be?
Windows 7 pro
8gigs ram
4770 HD ati
Intel quad 2.33
Posts
Here's what speed fan is giving me with just it and google chrome open.
system: 29c
cpu: 21c
aux: 15c
core0:57
core1:46
core2:46
core3:51
What temps am I looking for during browsing/gaming?
Also just checked my cpu fan, its running fine it appears. I also just turned up my two internal fans from low to med, hopefully that helps.
I cracked open the case before hand to look around, I THINK that the cable that goes from...um, something, to my video card wasn't all the way in. Not sure though, I can't recall. I just recall snapping it in and thinking 'huh, didn't know that snapped in'. From here I put two and two together . Still going to monitor it and see whats up.
Doc: That's right, twenty five years into the future. I've always dreamed on seeing the future, looking beyond my years, seeing the progress of mankind. I'll also be able to see who wins the next twenty-five world series.
Welp! There we go, hopefully that ends up being it . Also your avatar. Its...I must look at it more.
Mine was doing pretty much the exact same thing. What I did was open it up, clean the hell out of it and get rid of all the dust (and there was a lot), unplug the CPU fan and clean off the thermal past, reseat everything and make sure it's all situated perfectly, and put it all back together. After that, it's been working perfectly.
New problem has appeared which i put in the op. Any help would be so jawesome
It could be an issue with the video driver and or compatibility with software that you have installed. Try updating your video drivers to the newest version available. If you right click on my computer and select manage, go to event viewer and then windows logs. In there you can look through the application and system logs for errors that should give you something to google to find out if anyone else has similar issues and how they fixed it.
Many system manufacturers will have a disc you can download and run to test your hardware. You can also use the Linux disc to run some diagnostics although it is usually limited to memory tests.
Hopefully something will show up that points to what is causing the problem.
I am going to try hooking up a different monitor and video card tomorrow and see uf that changes anything. G
If that doesn't work, reset your CMOS.
Doc: That's right, twenty five years into the future. I've always dreamed on seeing the future, looking beyond my years, seeing the progress of mankind. I'll also be able to see who wins the next twenty-five world series.
Hm. I googled the reseting CMOS thing however I am not as hardware savvy as I thought. How does one do this?
And a small update. I've been out of the house all day and when I got home I powered up the computer and everything is working as normal. I do realize that I need to find the problem however instead of just being lazy about it =p.
Hopefully tomorrow before work I can do some more troubleshooting, for now, I will hope it last me through some Bad Company 2 before I go to work! I am sure I will be back soon however with a slew of new problems tomorrow.
If you never see any video at any time you have a a hardware problem. If you don't see video at any time when you start the computer you have a video card issue. Alternatively you can reset your BIOS by opening the computer while it is off and pulling the smallish watchlike battery that is on the motherboard, waiting a few seconds putting it back in and powering it back on.
You can also short circuit the usually three-pronged jumpers right next to it
Doc: That's right, twenty five years into the future. I've always dreamed on seeing the future, looking beyond my years, seeing the progress of mankind. I'll also be able to see who wins the next twenty-five world series.