Hi, hopefully this is the right place to ask
Last week when I booted up my PC, it showed a strange behavior. I couldn't find an exact match of the case that I encountered so not sure what's going on. Something worth to mention, the week before it happened, there were multiple power outages in my neighborhood but such things had happened occasionally for years.
A few minutes after my PC entered windows, it gave a big electrical shock, which I felt through my metal earphones. Also the display went off for a brief time but the monitor stayed on.
The display went blank again a few hours later but this time I couldn't tell if there was a shock since I didn't use my metal earphones. I stripped the components off the case and run the system naked for half a day or so for work and nothing happened. Everything seemed normal. I put the case back on and my PC run normal for a week until yesterday.
I played a game of CS2 and suddenly it completely shut down randomly. I opened the case and kickstarted it by shorting the power button and it booted normally. I put the case back on and tried playing six matches of CS2 to see if anything happened but nothing. Temp was quite hot but the peak didn't even hit 90, so I don't think it's temp issue.
My assumption is a component is shorted, but I can't tell which one. Since it happens very randomly I can't replicate any scenario to rule out a faulty component. If perhaps I could, how? Let me know if you have any solution. Here's a list of the components and their age:
1. Ryzen 5 5600 (<1 y.o)
2. Gigabyte A320M-S2H-V2 (>5 y.o)
3. HyperX Fury 16x2GB (<1y.o)
4. Sapphire RX6600 (>2 y.o)
5. Adata SX8200 Pro (~1 y.o)
6. Corsair SF450 (>2 y.o)
7. Silverstone SG11 (>5 y.o)
I also use a metal earphone and an aluminum keyboard for 5 years. My newest addition to the set up was USB and HDMI extension cables for my display tablet, which I installed a month ago. My case power button is difficult to press already, I have to hold it for a long time and use a quite strong force to get it working. Any help is appreciated, cheers!
Last week when I booted up my PC, it showed a strange behavior. I couldn't find an exact match of the case that I encountered so not sure what's going on. Something worth to mention, the week before it happened, there were multiple power outages in my neighborhood but such things had happened occasionally for years.
A few minutes after my PC entered windows, it gave a big electrical shock, which I felt through my metal earphones. Also the display went off for a brief time but the monitor stayed on.
The display went blank again a few hours later but this time I couldn't tell if there was a shock since I didn't use my metal earphones. I stripped the components off the case and run the system naked for half a day or so for work and nothing happened. Everything seemed normal. I put the case back on and my PC run normal for a week until yesterday.
I played a game of CS2 and suddenly it completely shut down randomly. I opened the case and kickstarted it by shorting the power button and it booted normally. I put the case back on and tried playing six matches of CS2 to see if anything happened but nothing. Temp was quite hot but the peak didn't even hit 90, so I don't think it's temp issue.
My assumption is a component is shorted, but I can't tell which one. Since it happens very randomly I can't replicate any scenario to rule out a faulty component. If perhaps I could, how? Let me know if you have any solution. Here's a list of the components and their age:
1. Ryzen 5 5600 (<1 y.o)
2. Gigabyte A320M-S2H-V2 (>5 y.o)
3. HyperX Fury 16x2GB (<1y.o)
4. Sapphire RX6600 (>2 y.o)
5. Adata SX8200 Pro (~1 y.o)
6. Corsair SF450 (>2 y.o)
7. Silverstone SG11 (>5 y.o)
I also use a metal earphone and an aluminum keyboard for 5 years. My newest addition to the set up was USB and HDMI extension cables for my display tablet, which I installed a month ago. My case power button is difficult to press already, I have to hold it for a long time and use a quite strong force to get it working. Any help is appreciated, cheers!