I just built a new desktop computer but i have one problem...

APRossi

Honorable
Jan 15, 2014
12
0
10,510
I just built a new desktop computer and everything seems to work fine for a bit then it reboots by itself. When picking parts i made sure all of them worked with each other and were compatable. Parts are listed: RaidMAX- Agusta ATX605 case, MSI socket fm2-a75ma-e35 motherboard, Corsair vengence 8gb (1x8gb) RAM ddr3 1600Ghz, Corsair cx 600m power supply, Amd A10-5800k Apu 3.8Ghz, ! tb desktop hard drive 7200 rpm sata 6gb/s, Windows 8.1, dvd+/- rw dual layer drive.

There are 9 fans total in this case 3 120mm led/ 1 120mm/ 4 80mm and that all came with the case and 1 on the gpu and one on the cpu. So i don't think overheating is the problem.

After getting everything up and running i installed protection and download all my driver updates for everything. After a little bit of time powered on it rebooted. About 1 hour powered on time. So then i thought i might have a faulty power supply so i exchanged for a new one and still having reboots.

Can anyone help me solve this so I can start using this desktop Please.
 
Solution
I'm having the same problem. Here's some tips that I've gotten, and while they didn't help me, they may help you. Firstly, download a program called memtest86+, which will check to see if your ram is producing any errors. Leave it running for a few hours. Secondly, try booting from an Ubuntu disk. If you still get a reboot while using that, you can be fairly certain it's a hardware issue. Lastly, try unplugging all possible peripherals from your motherboard (GPU, USB devices, ODD, PCI cards etc.) except your HDD, and try using that. If you still get reboots, you can rule out all those peripherals as being a possible cause. And of course, check your temps (if you haven't done so already). Hopefully this helps.
I'm having the same problem. Here's some tips that I've gotten, and while they didn't help me, they may help you. Firstly, download a program called memtest86+, which will check to see if your ram is producing any errors. Leave it running for a few hours. Secondly, try booting from an Ubuntu disk. If you still get a reboot while using that, you can be fairly certain it's a hardware issue. Lastly, try unplugging all possible peripherals from your motherboard (GPU, USB devices, ODD, PCI cards etc.) except your HDD, and try using that. If you still get reboots, you can rule out all those peripherals as being a possible cause. And of course, check your temps (if you haven't done so already). Hopefully this helps.
 
Solution
So I ran Memtest86 on my computer and it froze on its first pass at test 6. So just to make sure that info was right I ran it 5 more times and all the same results.