Possible Power Supply Problem?
#1
Posted 01 December 2012 - 07:38 PM
1. While gaming, my PC will randomly freeze (as in a system hang), with a hard reboot being the only way to regain control. (Holding down the power button to reset) I have monitored my temps, but the highest CPU I've seen is 49C, and the highest GPU I've seen is 71C. I have tried reinstalling Windows, each game individually and all my drivers. I have opened my case up, cleaned out dust, reseated my RAM and GPU, checked the cable connections for my PSU. My fans are running fine. When I first built my PC about a year ago, I had run multiple tests with Memtest and Prime95 (overnight) with no errors. Furmark runs fine. I cannot reproduce the freeze at will, sometimes it'll happen within minutes of turning on a game, sometimes days between freezes. I checked the event viewer, but the only warnings or errors to pop up involved 'an unexpected shutdown has occurred', which is caused by me pressing the power button to turn it off. When the freeze occurs, I lose all input from mouse/keyboard, whatever image is on the screen is stuck there. Now here's where I wonder if my GPU is possibly the issue- I have Realtek onboard audio and AMD's HDMI audio. When I have sound coming from HDMI, when the freeze happens I hear a repetitive clicking noise that is loud and annoying (almost as if the last bit of sound before the freeze is repeating rapidly). If I'm using the Realtek audio (headphones plugged into the case directly) then there's no sound at all. I have a Radeon HD 6850 now, I have an old Nvidia 9600GT that I've tried using, and my motherboard has a built in HD4250, all produce the same results. This tells me that the GPU probably is not the issue (despite the HDMI sound bug).
2. A handful of times recently, my desktop has randomly shut down on me (even when I was currently using it, so I know it's not a power plan taking effect). Again, I cannot reproduce this, but this happens far less often, only two or three times so far. My monitor stops getting a signal, then a few moments later the fans and case LEDs quit. I press the power button and nothing happens. I wait 10 seconds, try again, nothing. Not sure if it was a good idea or not, but I also tried unplugging the power chord from the tower and the surge protector, then plugging them back in. It still won't boot up. After another minute or so, I try again and it boots up. Goes straight to the windows desktop with no password (I have one set up) and ready to go, with no error messages. Event viewer doesn't even recognize any problems. It's almost like it went into sleep mode, because my programs would still be active and where I left off with no lost data (despite unplugging the power chord). The only way this makes sense is for the computer to be saving the open programs to disk like in hibernate, or to RAM like in sleep, but usually removing power should wipe my RAM. I'm not pressing any key combinations to do this, and sometimes it happens when I'm not actually at my PC, so this really confuses me. Any ideas?
Here's my setup-
AMD Phenom ii X4 970BE (not currently OC)
ASUS M5A88-V EVO
AMD Radeon HD 6850
G.Skill Ripjaw X Series 8GB (2x4GB)
OCZ ZS Series 650W PSU
Seagate 500GB HDD
NZXT Phantom 410 (with one extra 120mm fan on the side panel)
OCZ ZS Series 650W PSU, Seagate 500GB (OS Drive), Seagate 3TB, NZXT Phantom 410 , Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
#2
Posted 01 December 2012 - 08:10 PM
#3
Posted 01 December 2012 - 11:22 PM
One way to test the power supply is with OCCT and HW Monitor (a mufti-meter would be best, but HW monitor will do for the most part). Basically, if you have a multimeter handy, then connect it to the yellow and black wires of any connector, set the meter for DC power with at least a 12V range. Once you have the software or meter in place, fire up OCCT in power supply stress test mode. That will place the maximum draw against the PSU possible. Now, your 12V rail is likely to drop a little anyhow. To be safe, it shouldn't drop below 11.6V..
Now, if you make it through more than an hour of the OCCT power supply stress test with normal voltage levels, and without crashing, then your PSU is good.
More than once, I have seen some very interesting compatibility problems when it comes to AMD boards. These have become increasingly frequent... There is no decent way to check for this, so what I will suggest, is using Linux, and a long running benchmark like linpack. Linux is known for two things, one, sensitivity to minor problems. Two, a beautiful log telling you what it is seeing.
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
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Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
#4
Posted 02 December 2012 - 04:50 AM
@waldojim- I've updated my BIOS once, from version 1001 to 1302, although there are two newer versions. Both state they improve system stability, so I might give that a try again. I've reinstalled all my drivers, so I doubt it's from that, unless I've downloaded a bad driver twice. I have HW Monitor, but not OCCT. I'll give that a try, how exactly does it differ from Prime95?
OCZ ZS Series 650W PSU, Seagate 500GB (OS Drive), Seagate 3TB, NZXT Phantom 410 , Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
#5
Posted 02 December 2012 - 10:24 AM
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
The Green machine: AMD Sempron 145EE Unlocked and OC'd to 4.1Ghz, Gigabyte GD970A-DS3, 8GB ram @ 1600mhz, Nvidia 550Ti, Thermaltake BlueOrb, Antec EW385
Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
#6
Posted 03 December 2012 - 09:40 AM
The fact that you have to unplug the PC from the power source leads me in another direction. That is a rather extreme situation and usually only occurs in a major conflict within the BIOS/Drivers/OS. (This is one disadvantage of having the power cycle controlled by the BIOS and motherboard. In the old day the power button was an actual switch, but then we had to wait for the OS to cycle down and physically turn off the switch).
If this were my PC, I would strip it down to the basics, including using the onboard video and minimum memory (only two sticks) and would not even put a HD in it. I use an old Ubuntu distro disk for the "smoke test" on the initial boot of a new build. We are talking MB/CPU/Memory and a DVD drive and run the machine for a bit and see what happens. If it is stable in its operation, then add more pieces back to the puzzle. If you have a spare HD that has no critical or important data on it, I would put it in and reinstall the OS from scratch. Then make any changes you want in the video. Then again if it is stable, add the applications and games - one at a time - letting it run for a while between each one. If it acts up again, then you have found your weak link in the last addition.
This post has been edited by rgreen4: 03 December 2012 - 09:41 AM
#7
Posted 03 December 2012 - 05:53 PM
@rgreen4- Don't know enough about Ubuntu to know for sure, but can you install Windows based games (such as from Steam) onto it? The system runs great in the Windows environment, it's only when gaming that I encounter issues. I've let stress tests run overnight (I've done 24hr. tests multiple times) so I know the system is stable there. It's only when I boot up games like Skyrim, Sonic Generations, Assassin's Creed II, etc. that I experience these issues. I have a steam copy of Sonic 3 (from the Genesis) that never has issues, so it's only the larger games. I've used 3 different GPUs all with the same result. They all use different drivers (at least, the Nvidia card against the AMDs would) so I'm not sure what other software aspect to check.
OCZ ZS Series 650W PSU, Seagate 500GB (OS Drive), Seagate 3TB, NZXT Phantom 410 , Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
#8
Posted 03 December 2012 - 08:32 PM
I was advocating running it from the CD as a test event, although since you posted subsequently that you do not encounter a problem until you run a game, there is no point in running Ubuntu as a test. I just use the CD to test new builds before I put the HD in as obviously the machine will not run without an OS and Windows will not run from the DVD.
This post has been edited by rgreen4: 03 December 2012 - 08:32 PM
#9
Posted 03 December 2012 - 10:20 PM
OCZ ZS Series 650W PSU, Seagate 500GB (OS Drive), Seagate 3TB, NZXT Phantom 410 , Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
#10
Posted 04 December 2012 - 12:37 AM
blukatz92, on 03 December 2012 - 05:53 PM, said:
@rgreen4- Don't know enough about Ubuntu to know for sure, but can you install Windows based games (such as from Steam) onto it? The system runs great in the Windows environment, it's only when gaming that I encounter issues. I've let stress tests run overnight (I've done 24hr. tests multiple times) so I know the system is stable there. It's only when I boot up games like Skyrim, Sonic Generations, Assassin's Creed II, etc. that I experience these issues. I have a steam copy of Sonic 3 (from the Genesis) that never has issues, so it's only the larger games. I've used 3 different GPUs all with the same result. They all use different drivers (at least, the Nvidia card against the AMDs would) so I'm not sure what other software aspect to check.
If your system passes the OCCT PSU test, then your hardware is fine. At this stage, we need to be looking specifically at software. As the hardware is clean, don't worry about stripping the machine, or running Linux, as it is unnecessary. At this stage, you need to start looking at Windows, drivers, 3rd party software and so on.
I would say start with a Windows 'refresh'. Use your boot CD, and have it rewrite the core Windows files. This should leave all your documents in place, though you will need to reinstall most software. Take your time installing drivers. Grab up the important ones first, install the offending games and test with core drivers only. This would usually be the video card, chipset, network, and sound drivers. Then add in additional software from there, testing after each software install.
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
The Green machine: AMD Sempron 145EE Unlocked and OC'd to 4.1Ghz, Gigabyte GD970A-DS3, 8GB ram @ 1600mhz, Nvidia 550Ti, Thermaltake BlueOrb, Antec EW385
Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
#11
Posted 04 December 2012 - 11:15 PM
OCZ ZS Series 650W PSU, Seagate 500GB (OS Drive), Seagate 3TB, NZXT Phantom 410 , Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
#12
Posted 12 December 2012 - 04:59 PM
OCZ ZS Series 650W PSU, Seagate 500GB (OS Drive), Seagate 3TB, NZXT Phantom 410 , Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
#13
Posted 19 December 2012 - 09:56 PM
Anyways, ran Bluescreenview program to read the dmp file created by the crash, and it tells me my DAEMON tools driver caused the crash. I don't really use it anymore, no big loss, so I uninstall it. Well, there was one other thing that happened... my GPU driver was removed. I did nothing to manually remove it, and the dmp file does not reference anything to do with video drivers. (Only the DAEMON tools driver was suspect) I redownloaded the 12.10 drivers from AMD's site, but my GPU is no longer detected by my system. Windows has defaulted to using the generic drivers, which means as of the current moment, I can't even run most of my games. I've tried installing the drivers twice to no avail. I also fully uninstalled catalyst then reinstalled a third time, still nothing. Device manager see my video card (it's listed under Display Adapaters as AMD Radeon 6800 series, but Catalyst isn't seeing it. There's an exclamation mark next to the Radeon's entry in DM, so I tried manually installing the driver, rather than using the .exe file from AMD. It gave me a list of drivers to choose from, and it showed me 8 drivers listed specifically for the 6800 series from various previous versions. Is there a way to clean out the old versions? I'm wondering if they might be causing errors, even if they aren't the active drivers.
EDIT: Might as well add, I am still unable to install the Catalyst drivers from my Radeon, the driver software update has the loading bar and says it's installing, but it never finishes, usually it stops and says the installation timed out.
This post has been edited by blukatz92: 19 December 2012 - 10:05 PM
OCZ ZS Series 650W PSU, Seagate 500GB (OS Drive), Seagate 3TB, NZXT Phantom 410 , Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
#14
Posted 20 December 2012 - 12:16 AM
blukatz92, on 19 December 2012 - 09:56 PM, said:
Anyways, ran Bluescreenview program to read the dmp file created by the crash, and it tells me my DAEMON tools driver caused the crash. I don't really use it anymore, no big loss, so I uninstall it. Well, there was one other thing that happened... my GPU driver was removed. I did nothing to manually remove it, and the dmp file does not reference anything to do with video drivers. (Only the DAEMON tools driver was suspect) I redownloaded the 12.10 drivers from AMD's site, but my GPU is no longer detected by my system. Windows has defaulted to using the generic drivers, which means as of the current moment, I can't even run most of my games. I've tried installing the drivers twice to no avail. I also fully uninstalled catalyst then reinstalled a third time, still nothing. Device manager see my video card (it's listed under Display Adapaters as AMD Radeon 6800 series, but Catalyst isn't seeing it. There's an exclamation mark next to the Radeon's entry in DM, so I tried manually installing the driver, rather than using the .exe file from AMD. It gave me a list of drivers to choose from, and it showed me 8 drivers listed specifically for the 6800 series from various previous versions. Is there a way to clean out the old versions? I'm wondering if they might be causing errors, even if they aren't the active drivers.
EDIT: Might as well add, I am still unable to install the Catalyst drivers from my Radeon, the driver software update has the loading bar and says it's installing, but it never finishes, usually it stops and says the installation timed out.
Use driver sweeper. You can find it here.
Before you run it, ensure that all of your current video drivers are completely uninstalled (as far as Windows is concerned anyhow.
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
The Green machine: AMD Sempron 145EE Unlocked and OC'd to 4.1Ghz, Gigabyte GD970A-DS3, 8GB ram @ 1600mhz, Nvidia 550Ti, Thermaltake BlueOrb, Antec EW385
Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
#15
Posted 20 December 2012 - 03:53 AM
(The video driver thing, that is)
This post has been edited by blukatz92: 20 December 2012 - 03:54 AM
OCZ ZS Series 650W PSU, Seagate 500GB (OS Drive), Seagate 3TB, NZXT Phantom 410 , Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
#16
Posted 20 December 2012 - 10:00 AM
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
The Green machine: AMD Sempron 145EE Unlocked and OC'd to 4.1Ghz, Gigabyte GD970A-DS3, 8GB ram @ 1600mhz, Nvidia 550Ti, Thermaltake BlueOrb, Antec EW385
Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
#18
Posted 23 December 2012 - 10:55 AM
HetfieldJ, on 23 December 2012 - 10:19 AM, said:
Me too. The proposed solutions have good merit in not costing anything but time.
But it has been an interesting thread to read including the declaration of solving something by reading a proposed solution on the Internet rather than actually doing it and then declaring victory when it succeeds. Everybody gets a trophy these days I guess.
This post has been edited by FascistNation: 23 December 2012 - 10:57 AM
What's the Question?
#19
Posted 24 December 2012 - 01:20 AM
FascistNation, on 23 December 2012 - 10:55 AM, said:
HetfieldJ, on 23 December 2012 - 10:19 AM, said:
Me too. The proposed solutions have good merit in not costing anything but time.
But it has been an interesting thread to read including the declaration of solving something by reading a proposed solution on the Internet rather than actually doing it and then declaring victory when it succeeds. Everybody gets a trophy these days I guess.
So your answer is to ignore all the testing that has been done, ignore the fact that the power supply is perfectly stable under unreasonable loads (as you will likely never see the system at 100% power draw) and buy a new power supply because "free" testing is irrelevant?
Like I have told others here, either be helpful, or don't post. The testing indicates his power supply is perfectly fine. He also has a far larger power supply than his system needs. Unless you have some sound logic why you believe that OCCT PSU test didn't find an underlying problem, you are in no position to suggest anyone replace parts.
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
The Green machine: AMD Sempron 145EE Unlocked and OC'd to 4.1Ghz, Gigabyte GD970A-DS3, 8GB ram @ 1600mhz, Nvidia 550Ti, Thermaltake BlueOrb, Antec EW385
Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
#20
Posted 30 December 2012 - 04:38 PM
Something that came up recently, Skyrim won't start anymore. Well, it starts, but I can't see it. It shows up as a process in Task Manager, but not as an application. So it's using resources, but there's no windows that I can view it. It doesn't show up on the task bar, and it's not in the Alt-Tab menu. I've rebooted the computer, used Steam's verification tool to check the installation files, and disabled my recent mods, but nothing works. Not sure what caused this, but I'm probably just going to have to reinstall the game.
I got a 3TB Barracuda for Christmas, so everything vital has been backed up. So far, I haven't had another system freeze since I replaced my graphic drivers last night, but I'm not ready to call this solved yet. If I get a freeze again, I'm going to reinstall Windows again, otherwise, we'll see what happens from here. Thanks for all your help so far, by the way!
OCZ ZS Series 650W PSU, Seagate 500GB (OS Drive), Seagate 3TB, NZXT Phantom 410 , Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
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