Question Help needed from an old folk's home inmate - er - patient ?

TobyCatVa

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May 16, 2023
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I am desperate for help/advise

What happened - A staff member came in running a damp rag over all flat surfaces and ignored me yelling STOP! She wiggled my power cord where it enters the PSU. <spark/flash>

Result - The PC shut off and trying to reboot results in an LED coming on but no system beeps are heard my GTX970 fans do not spin, the stock cooler on my AMD FX 8350 does not spin.

Questions - Is my ASUS M5A97 LE R2.0 Motherboard toast?
Just the EVGA 600W ATX 80 PLUS GOLD PSU?
Everything fried?

As stated I am indeed in an old folks home and bed ridden so my PC was my world. I am on a borrowed Thinkpad to email you. I have a limited disposable income after care expenses of $30 a month. The facility will not repair the damage the GNA did (she quit after that first day) nor will they help me in sending it out. I have no body to help me so I need a plan of action. I built the PC back when I was able to go and do. I can take apart and swap things in the PC.

I would like your thoughts on what parts are toast in order of likelihood.

As if I order a new PSU it will be mine forever as nobody here is going to help with returns.

I need a PC back in my life/as my life and I am left grieving the old one and unsure if I try and save it or save money in misery to buy a replacement as I wait for $30 months to add up to a usable amount to get back what I had or I buy used parts swapping them in until my PC returns from the dead.

Thank you for any advise you can give.
 
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Just the EVGA 600W ATX 80 PLUS GOLD PSU?
Knowing the exact model (or part number) of the PSU + PSU's age, will answer this question;
Everything fried?

So, what model PSU you have? If you don't know, look the PSUs label. There the part number (or serial number) is listed.

I would like your thoughts on what parts are toast in order of likelihood.
Depends on the model of the PSU, but the order from most likely would be:
PSU - MoBo - GPU - HDD/SSD - RAM - CPU.

to get back what I had or I buy used parts swapping them in until my PC returns from the dead.
Without 2nd, compatible system, to test out individual components, it is impossible to tell what components survived and what didn't. Could be that all are dead. Could be that just PSU and MoBo are dead. But that you can't tell until you start replacing components. Whereby you may end up with completely new system.

In your situation, i'd suggest you buy yourself 2nd hand laptop. Takes up far less space, is portable and not prone of someone poking it to death, as it was with your current build. Also, based on the CPU you have, your build is ancient (CPU is 13 years old) and whole build giving up a ghost isn't that much of a surprise.
 
Has someone tried turning the switch on the back of the power supply to off, removing the power cable, and hitting the power button on the computer for 20 seconds or so to clear the charge. Then plugging the power cable back in, turning the power switch on the power supply back to on, and seeing if it turns on after that? It could have tripped a protection mode and those steps could help reset it out of that mode.
 
I can't get to the tower atm to open it for the model number. Will have to wait on that until the night nurse does first rounds as she would cause an issue seeing me digging around in a computer. I replaced a bad ram stick a couple years ago and was yelled at "You could electrocute yourself!"

Tried artk2219 suggestion, Thanks but no bueno.

As to a laptop path what am I looking for to play the steam games my PC did and YouTube at 2X speed. My main activities. Everything at 1080P. My big monitor is fine and jacked into this Thinkpad the former activities girl is letting me borrow It is a potato Thinkpad E545 that makes my 13 year old PC look state of the art before the spark. LoL But beggars and choosers and all I am lucky to be able to post.

Sorry I am wordy, have not been online in awhile.
 
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I have a limited disposable income after care expenses of $30 a month.
It's a shame you're on the wrong side of the Atlantic for me to (potentially) drive over and visit. I have a box full of spare PSUs.

With only $30 per month, it's going to take several months to afford a good quality PSU. Anything (new) priced at $30 or less will be junk. If you're really desperate though .......

Ideally what you need is a Good Samaritan with a spare PSU lying around. Do you have the equivalent of a "Repair Shop" run by local volunteers who give their time for free and fix things?
https://tellyvisions.org/article/repair-shop-seasons-12-where-watch-stream-us

She wiggled my power cord where it enters the PSU. <spark/flash>
I had this happen on a cheap and nasty 900W ATX PSU when I wiggled the power cord. The result was a dead PSU, but the rest of the computer was fine. The PSU was only 1 year old. Serves me right for buying cheap.

Do you know anyone who's competent and trust worthy enough to hand over the computer, or who might be willing to visit with a replacement PSU hidden in a bag? Maybe the son or daughter of a member of staff who enjoys building PCs.

Since you're able to go online, can you check out normal computer repair shops in your area and give them a call. You might find a generous soul who's prepared to drop round without charging exhorbitant call out fees. Worth a try.

Good luck.
 
I like the several posts above suggesting trying to find a local volunteer (individual or organization) willing to come in and help. I suggest the MOST likely problem source is in the PSU. Of course, temporarily substituting another would be a way to test that. By the way, according to the mobo manual that single green LED being lit says that the mobo is receiving SOME power, sufficient to get its basic monitoring circuits working ready to detect any attempt to actually boot up. But is does NOT guarantee ALL PSU outputs are working.

My suspicion is that some water got into the PSU at the rear close to the power cord socket. IF some of that still is inside as liquid water, you night be able to fix things IF someone can remove the PSU entirely from the case and open it up CAREFULLY. I say that because the large capacitors inside WILL have some residual charge on them and those CAN be lethal! Someone who really understands all that should know how to discharge those safely before doing anything else. THEN he / she could proceed to search for liquid water and try to remove. If none is found, continue by searching for stains and dirty residue left that may be conduction paths for electrical signals. Such can be removed with light scraping or using a damp Q-tip. Last step is to LEAVE the PSU open to the air for a day or two or three, THEN close up and re-install. In that time any remaining liquid water can dry out - the drying is VERY hard to do with a closed PSU box inside your case!

All of that costs nothing for parts, and only consumes some skilled time. A good volunteer might be able to do that, even if perhaps under your supervision. And maybe having the work done by someone ELSE will keep the cautious staff at bay.
 
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My suspicion is that some water got into the PSU at the rear close to the power cord socket.
A lot depends on how heavily soaked the sponge or cleaning cloth was as to how much (if any) water got into the ATX PSU inlet during "cleaning". When I killed my 900W PSU by wiggling the power lead, no water was involved, just a "make/break" connection whilst the computer was switched on and a big fat spark.

As an electronics design engineer working on MILSPEC and Aerospace systems, I suspect that a semiconductor or electrolytic inside the PSU has sustained permanent damage. I'd caution against untrained personnel opening up the PSU, unless they have experience. I haven't died yet but I believe I know what I'm doing. The biggest PSU I worked on was 10,000V at 2.5A DC fed by a 3-phase 25kVA transformer.

I say that because the large capacitors inside WILL have some residual charge on them and those CAN be lethal!
The bulk storage capacitor in an ATX PSU typically rated at 400/420V DC will certainly store charge at a high voltage after the PSU is switched off, for a period of time. We can have arguments as to how long the charge remains a hazard (minutes, hours, days, weeks, months or even years, depending on who you listen to).

My advice is to try a different PSU and accept the old PSU has probably died and may be beyond economic repair. Play safe unless you're a competent technician or engineer.
 
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My suspicion is that some water got into the PSU at the rear close to the power cord socket.
Once you get sparks/flash out of the PSU, the PSU is usually dead. Drying it up won't make it work again. Also, PSU went "boom" after the power cord of it was wiggled, so, i don't think it would be water damage. Instead low/crap quality PSU that was on it's last leg and poking it was the straw that broke the camel's back.

As to a laptop path what am I looking for to play the steam games my PC did and YouTube at 2X speed. My main activities. Everything at 1080P. My big monitor is fine and jacked into this Thinkpad the former activities girl is letting me borrow It is a potato Thinkpad E545 that makes my 13 year old PC look state of the art before the spark. LoL But beggars and choosers and all I am lucky to be able to post.
It does not look good for you. As others have already pointed out, i too advise to get outside help that has the hardware know-how and can come on-site.

Since otherwise, with $30 budget, you're looking 1-2 years of collecting funds to be able to afford even the bare minimum in terms of desktop PC.

The cheapest you're looking at, while re-using your PC case, SSD/HDD (IF they survived) and GPU (if it also survived), comes to $200.
Like so:

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: Intel Pentium Gold G6500 4.1 GHz Dual-Core Processor ($58.95 @ Amazon)
Motherboard: ASRock H510M-HDV/M.2 SE Micro ATX LGA1200 Motherboard ($69.98 @ Amazon)
Memory: Samsung M378A1K43CB2-CRC 8 GB (1 x 8 GB) DDR4-2400 CL17 Memory ($13.30 @ Amazon)
Power Supply: Corsair CX (2023) 550 W 80+ Bronze Certified ATX Power Supply ($59.99 @ Amazon)
Total: $202.22

Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2025-01-15 12:53 EST-0500


It is the cheapest you could get in terms of getting desktop PC working again, guaranteed.

Few words about components;
Intel CPU is weaker than your old AMD CPU, but it has iGPU in it, so, when your GTX 970 didn't survive, you can still use the PC. No 1080p gaming though. But web browsing and Youtube it can do. But when GTX 970 did survived, then 1080p gaming as well. Not with as high FPS as before, but still something.
CPU cooler is included with CPU.

MoBo is cheapest MoBo that supports this CPU. So, nothing special but does work.

RAM is 1x DIMM of 8GB. Maybe more than you had, maybe same amount, we don't know. But it has faster transfer speed since it's DDR4 2400 MT/s, compared to your DDR3 that you had in your old build.

And PSU is the cheapest i'm comfortable suggesting for you.

As you can see, even the bare minimum costs quite a bit. Of course, all those components are brand new and while you can buy used CPU-MoBo-RAM combo just fine, NEVER buy used PSU. So, brand new PSU alone will be $60, if not more.

Due to your budget, hence why i suggested getting a laptop. Can be even used one, since at current moment, you're living on borrowed laptop.
Getting your own laptop would give you more sense of security and would give you your Youtube back. Maybe even some light gaming, 720p or so.
But as you've said it yourself;
But beggars and choosers and all I am lucky to be able to post.
You do not have enough funds to get desktop PC back.

To get desktop PC, you will need outside help. Maybe some of our forum members who live nearby, can come and help you out (i already put the word out after i posted my initial reply). Or via local community when you reach out.
I, personally, have 0 issues to help you out, but i live across the pond (Atlantic Ocean), in EU and there is no way i can come over and build you a new desktop PC.
 
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Aeacus may be quite right. I was hoping the "sparks" report was merely a few tiny sparks at the CONNECTOR where the cable from the wall enters the PSU rear. BUT if there were large sparks from INSIDE the PSU at that time, there is a REAL possibility that the damage is much larger and the PSU needs replacement.

My HOPE is that the incident was only minor and drying out will solve that. IF you can arrange to do as I suggested for FREE, you will find out whether that works. If it does not, you KNOW replacement is required.
 
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Thank you all, The PSU was an EVGA 700B 80PLUS BRONZE 12 years old, the spark was one big flash from where the loose cord entered the PSU at the PSU, the cloth was damp for dust but not wet. Somebody here has stepped in to help me in private messages.
 
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From my first build to now Tom's forums and information has always gotten me through. BTW this is not my original account so you can ignore the joined date I joined Tom's in 1997 when a guild mate in EQ sent me to gain knowledge so I could build not buy. THANKS TOM'S PEOPLE.
 
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