Ok, so I goofed while assembling my rig (be kind, this is only my 2nd build, 10 years after the first one) I goofed and tried to connect two case fan wires that were not meant to be connected. Even stupider, I did this while the OS was being installed.
There was a popping sound and everything shut down and a slight burning smell. No smoke, at least. 😂
However, I was able to power it back on but kept getting the "Windows installation cannot continue" popup. After a bit of googling to find a regedit fix, was able to complete the OS install. Installed rest of my software, no problems, works fine, case temps perfect.
So while the PSU appears to be working fine (it's a Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W, way overkill for my modest non-gaming usage) I am wondering if there could be any long-term reliability issues as a result of my goof, or whether PSUs generally are designed to shrug off such things without breaking a sweat, or if I should exchange it for a new one just to be safe.
Thoughts?
There was a popping sound and everything shut down and a slight burning smell. No smoke, at least. 😂
However, I was able to power it back on but kept getting the "Windows installation cannot continue" popup. After a bit of googling to find a regedit fix, was able to complete the OS install. Installed rest of my software, no problems, works fine, case temps perfect.
So while the PSU appears to be working fine (it's a Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W, way overkill for my modest non-gaming usage) I am wondering if there could be any long-term reliability issues as a result of my goof, or whether PSUs generally are designed to shrug off such things without breaking a sweat, or if I should exchange it for a new one just to be safe.
Thoughts?