The red heat-sink right next to all the sata3 connectors gets so hot and I mean like boiling hot you can literatelyburn your hand on it, I don't think its suppose to get that hot not even in operation imagine how hot it would get if it actually ran a few hours. I just attempted to build a new rig since my previous computer is from 2002, so I bought all these parts I thought they were all compatiable but it turns out something is not right, I believe it's the motherboard I got the ASRock Fatal1ty x99x killer which doesn't boot up and I also got the ASRock Fatal1ty x99m killer bought it after and they both get the exact same problem with not booting up and the light on the Killer LAN just blinks momentarily upon powering the power supply unit. Something tells me the actual problem is the CMOS was set automatic to the previous owner's power supply unit and doesn't allow detection of any new power supply units that's my best theory so far what's going on ![]() I tried short circuiting the power +/GND pins if the power buttons were broken still nothing happens. I think it doesn't send the proper command for the power supply boxes to start spinning their fans. It could be both X99M and X99 Killer's are board defective as I got them both used.īut I don't believe in odds that low where 2 boards made by the same company give the same bad results thats too highly unlikely in my opinion. how can two boards have the same result I believe they must have some kind of plastic like you know they ship new devices with a plastic cover on the battery that you have to remove first before it starts working maybe something like that I have to remove or activate let me know. Yes that red big heatsink shouldn't be getting that hot, the mini X99M board has the same exact result. They all give the same result the yellow light blinks once on the back IO Panel and that's it. ![]() I tried 3 different power supply boxes and one of these power supply boxes was removed from a working active server rack which I know works 100% it's also was a 750 watt power supply not the corsair 550 watt that I used in the video.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |