N Nada190 Distinguished Oct 14, 2013 435 0 18,810 Feb 1, 2014 #1 Is there a good way to determine where the squeaking is coming from? I have 14 case fans and I determined it was none of them already, can't be CPU fan either so it's gotta be the PSU right?
Is there a good way to determine where the squeaking is coming from? I have 14 case fans and I determined it was none of them already, can't be CPU fan either so it's gotta be the PSU right?
Solution MauveCloud Feb 1, 2014 14 case fans? What case do you have, a Corsair 900D? Anyway, if you think it's coming from your psu, try the paperclip trick with nothing else connected to the psu: http://www.overclock.net/t/96712/how-to-jump-start-a-power-supply-psu-test-a-power-supply-and-components
14 case fans? What case do you have, a Corsair 900D? Anyway, if you think it's coming from your psu, try the paperclip trick with nothing else connected to the psu: http://www.overclock.net/t/96712/how-to-jump-start-a-power-supply-psu-test-a-power-supply-and-components
MauveCloud Splendid May 7, 2010 2,829 0 21,960 Feb 1, 2014 Solution #2 14 case fans? What case do you have, a Corsair 900D? Anyway, if you think it's coming from your psu, try the paperclip trick with nothing else connected to the psu: http://www.overclock.net/t/96712/how-to-jump-start-a-power-supply-psu-test-a-power-supply-and-components Upvote 0 Downvote Solution
14 case fans? What case do you have, a Corsair 900D? Anyway, if you think it's coming from your psu, try the paperclip trick with nothing else connected to the psu: http://www.overclock.net/t/96712/how-to-jump-start-a-power-supply-psu-test-a-power-supply-and-components
N Nada190 Distinguished Oct 14, 2013 435 0 18,810 Feb 1, 2014 #3 Funny how it stopped minutes after I posted this. And yeah it's a 900D. Upvote 0 Downvote