Question Is my PSU bad? System seems to get power OK but PSU tester fails the PG test... but all voltage rails measure ok.

Cyber_Akuma

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Oct 5, 2002
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I have been having a mountain of issues with my system. It started when I tried to replace a drive and it would no longer turn on.

After stripping it down to essentials, it would turn on but would display no video, so I plugged my GPU back in and I would get video.

However, after this I was getting all sorts of random problems. The motherboard would not post about 10-20% of the time, I would sometimes get all sorts of odd POST error messages that made no sense (such as claiming the CPU had been changed when it had not been touched in years, or case intrusion detection went off when neither the motherboard nor case has that feature).

It also almost never manages to post if I have any SATA drives connected, even if it's just an optical drive.

I can get it to boot from USB however, so I used that first to run memtest86+, no problems after 12+ hours and three cycles. Then I booted the usb drive into Linux and ran 36 hours of Prime95, no issues, and then added two hours of Furmark on top of that, no issues. So I figured if memtest86+ showed no errors, and the stress of Ptime95 along with furmark gave no errors, this means the CPU, GPU, RAM, and PSU must be ok and likely the motherboard has gone bad, especially since it has been on for almost a week now running off that Linux USB. Once it POSTs it seems to run fine, but it's getting it to complete POST in the first place that is the problem.

As I was taking it apart and disconnecting everything to get it ready to rebuild with a new motherboard however, since everything was now disconnected I figured it wouldn't hurt to plug it into a new PSU tester I got during this mess, and to my surprise it fails:

View: https://i.imgur.com/B2V9aqx.jpg


The thing is, all the voltage rails appear to be fine according to that readout. Yet, the "Power Good" signal is what is failing, which doesn't really make sense if all the voltages check out. I am confused now if the PSU could be the culprit, the motherboard, or both? The PSU is also still under warranty, would this be enough to count for a warranty replacement?
 

Lutfij

Titan
Moderator
When posting a thread of troubleshooting nature, it's customary to include your full system's specs. How old is the PSU? Might want to see if your get into BIOS and remain there indefinitely. While there, check and see what BIOS version you're on.
 

Cyber_Akuma

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Sorry, since I pretty much just had the PSU connected to the tester and nothing else, I figured the rest of the specs didn't matter.

Here is basically what my system looks like right now in PcPartPicker (although almost all of these parts are disconnected atm):

https://pcpartpicker.com/user/Cyber_Akuma/saved/8qmPFT

The PSU is 8 years old, I got it late 2012, it had at least a 10 year warranty IIRC when I got it. (CORRECTION: It has a 7 year warranty, seems it's out of warranty if it's the PSU)

My BIOS is on version 2104, the latest version (which was in 2013) but I re-flashed the update last week just to make sure the BIOS wasn't corrupt.

And I have been able to go into my BIOS and leave it there for a few hours without issues while I was troubleshooting it.
 
Last edited:
Sorry, since I pretty much just had the PSU connected to the tester and nothing else, I figured the rest of the specs didn't matter.

Here is basically what my system looks like right now in PcPartPicker (although almost all of these parts are disconnected atm):

https://pcpartpicker.com/user/Cyber_Akuma/saved/8qmPFT

The PSU is 8 years old, I got it late 2012, it had at least a 10 year warranty IIRC when I got it. (CORRECTION: It has a 7 year warranty, seems it's out of warranty if it's the PSU)

My BIOS is on version 2104, the latest version (which was in 2013) but I re-flashed the update last week just to make sure the BIOS wasn't corrupt.

And I have been able to go into my BIOS and leave it there for a few hours without issues while I was troubleshooting it.
You are having weird seemingly random problems with your PC.
You have an 8-year-old power supply that has failed a PSU tester test for power good. Perhaps these things are related?
Seems like a good time to replace the power supply.
 

Chuckiechan

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Nov 5, 2013
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It looks marginally under powered to me.
It's 8 years old. If I were you I'd replace it just because it's closer to failure every day forward from the day it was built.
On the top your 4.9 is spec'd 5, but you should read ~ 5.5. 12.2 I'd look for 12.5
On the bottom, 12.0 I'd like at 12.5, and 5.1 I'd like 5.5.

If you have a volt meter, I just did a explanation on PS testing manually. It's posted under power supplies.