I have the following system:
Asus B450 F Gaming 2
Ryzen 5 3600
2x 16 GB HyperX Fury RGB 3200MHz
Crucial P3 500 GB NVMe
DeepCool LT 520 240mm AIO
EVGA 600W non-modular PSU
Sleeved extensions for ATX & EPS (can't remember the brand)
3x various SATA SSDs
Gigabyte RTX 4060 Aero 8 GB
Some huge old Thermaltake case with motherboard rotated 90°, modded to fit 9 fans & 240mm radiator
I've been using the computer mostly for a bit of Blender, some Python programming, image editing and for music production. A couple of weeks ago I unplugged it so I could do some decorating and move furniture around. I've got another computer that's good enough for YouTube, email & browsing, and while I've been busy with home improvement jobs I haven't really had any time for productivity.
A few days ago I plugged the computer in again and turned it on, but I could only hear some fans spinning for a few seconds (probably the radiator fans) before everything shut down again. There was never any video signal. I decided to leave it until I had more time to check everything, and yesterday I unplugged all fans, drives and ARGB connectors, and then plugged everything back in again. I didn't unplug the ATX and EPS power connectors, but I made sure that they were securely plugged in.
With the back of the PSU pointing upward, I could see a large blue spark inside when I turned the power on, and nothing happened except for an LED (the red one indicating a boot problem) lighting up on the motherboard.
As I was going to upgrade my PC one last time before I buld an AM5 system, I had planned several purchases for the near future - a Seasonic modular 850W PSU and MSI MAG B550 Tomahawk motherboard in 2 weeks, and a month later a Ryzen 9 5900X or 5950X (depending on the price at the time). I'll also want to replace those SATA SSDs with M.2 NVMes. But because I (regrettably) haven't got a bunch of old components around for testing, I'm unsure how much damage has been done. I assume that whatever happened could have also fried the motherboard , CPU and/or memory, and (what a horrific thought!) maybe even the GPU? So I'm not sure whether it would be a good idea to hook up a new PSU to potentially damaged components?
Although I can't afford to buy a completely new PC, I'm happy to spend a bit of money on some cheap old parts to do some testing. What would be the best approach for this? Even though I realise that I could just get the new components when I can afford them as originally planned, and wait with assembling everything until I have all the bits together, I don't really want to be stuck with a cheap Celeron and intel UHD graphics until then if I can avoid it. And I'd also lie to resuse the memory for the time being, if it's still working. What should I do?
Asus B450 F Gaming 2
Ryzen 5 3600
2x 16 GB HyperX Fury RGB 3200MHz
Crucial P3 500 GB NVMe
DeepCool LT 520 240mm AIO
EVGA 600W non-modular PSU
Sleeved extensions for ATX & EPS (can't remember the brand)
3x various SATA SSDs
Gigabyte RTX 4060 Aero 8 GB
Some huge old Thermaltake case with motherboard rotated 90°, modded to fit 9 fans & 240mm radiator
I've been using the computer mostly for a bit of Blender, some Python programming, image editing and for music production. A couple of weeks ago I unplugged it so I could do some decorating and move furniture around. I've got another computer that's good enough for YouTube, email & browsing, and while I've been busy with home improvement jobs I haven't really had any time for productivity.
A few days ago I plugged the computer in again and turned it on, but I could only hear some fans spinning for a few seconds (probably the radiator fans) before everything shut down again. There was never any video signal. I decided to leave it until I had more time to check everything, and yesterday I unplugged all fans, drives and ARGB connectors, and then plugged everything back in again. I didn't unplug the ATX and EPS power connectors, but I made sure that they were securely plugged in.
With the back of the PSU pointing upward, I could see a large blue spark inside when I turned the power on, and nothing happened except for an LED (the red one indicating a boot problem) lighting up on the motherboard.
As I was going to upgrade my PC one last time before I buld an AM5 system, I had planned several purchases for the near future - a Seasonic modular 850W PSU and MSI MAG B550 Tomahawk motherboard in 2 weeks, and a month later a Ryzen 9 5900X or 5950X (depending on the price at the time). I'll also want to replace those SATA SSDs with M.2 NVMes. But because I (regrettably) haven't got a bunch of old components around for testing, I'm unsure how much damage has been done. I assume that whatever happened could have also fried the motherboard , CPU and/or memory, and (what a horrific thought!) maybe even the GPU? So I'm not sure whether it would be a good idea to hook up a new PSU to potentially damaged components?
Although I can't afford to buy a completely new PC, I'm happy to spend a bit of money on some cheap old parts to do some testing. What would be the best approach for this? Even though I realise that I could just get the new components when I can afford them as originally planned, and wait with assembling everything until I have all the bits together, I don't really want to be stuck with a cheap Celeron and intel UHD graphics until then if I can avoid it. And I'd also lie to resuse the memory for the time being, if it's still working. What should I do?