CryptWizard
New Member
I just recieved my new computer parts (965P-DS3, Pentium (Core 2 Duo) E2140, 8500GT and some other stuff) yesterday and put it all together and when I did the touching the power contacts with the screwdriver thing, I was surprised to find that absolutely nothing happened, so I proceeded to find out which component was faulty one by one.
First, I took out the power supply and put it in my old computer: works perfectly. That's the PSU out of the picture.
Next was the RAM (4xSuperTalent 512MB DDR2-800 4-4-3-8 that I got off eBay). I took out all except one module and I tried each module one at a time and tried each module in every slot. Still no luck. That's the RAM out of the picture.
I took the old PCI S3 Video Card that I found on the street in an old discarded Pentium II computer and put it into the new 965P-DS3. Still not working. To make sure that the graphics card I took off the street wasn't faulty itself, first I tried it in my current computer, worked perfectly (abliet not being able to support 1280x1024, not that I expect something that old to). That's the graphics card out of the picture.
Just before I send the motherboard back, does anyone think that something else may be the problem instead of the motherboard, so I don't waste time and money sending back a perfectly good motherboard?
First, I took out the power supply and put it in my old computer: works perfectly. That's the PSU out of the picture.
Next was the RAM (4xSuperTalent 512MB DDR2-800 4-4-3-8 that I got off eBay). I took out all except one module and I tried each module one at a time and tried each module in every slot. Still no luck. That's the RAM out of the picture.
I took the old PCI S3 Video Card that I found on the street in an old discarded Pentium II computer and put it into the new 965P-DS3. Still not working. To make sure that the graphics card I took off the street wasn't faulty itself, first I tried it in my current computer, worked perfectly (abliet not being able to support 1280x1024, not that I expect something that old to). That's the graphics card out of the picture.
Just before I send the motherboard back, does anyone think that something else may be the problem instead of the motherboard, so I don't waste time and money sending back a perfectly good motherboard?