- Thread Starter
- #51
I do not understand. What do you call connector here?OK. So I'd bet you have one connector that's not hooked to anything. Or you can remove a connector to a peripheral device like networking or the graphics card. Black is ground. Measure the voltages on the other pins. You should have something on all or most of them. But you only need to test one connector.
I could remove some peripherals, but not the place where they are connected.
Should I test that peripherals get electricity from their connectors?
You mean to test that plugged cables of the PSU are really plugged in the motherboard?Power supply connector pinouts here. This might be a bit tricky to measure however, with the connector plugged in. Perhaps you can try on the other side of the board where the connector pins come through, if you can access the back. What's really needed is a breakout connector cable.
i.e. there is really connection?
Why should that have changed with the hard power off?
Why should such a problem prevail after taking other PSU?
How to identify them? What should be written there?look at the screenprint layer on the PCB itself and see if you can identify any test points; there may be test points for 12V, 5V etc.
I have done that many times with different PSUs.OK, here's a useful trick to test the PSU standalone. Check that the PSU is producing the correct output voltages, that's a good first step.
In a previous post you see an image of my motherboard. Bellow right, between BIOS Battery and IDE connector youI had a M4A88TD or something very close to that model; the BIOS chip was socketed/removable.
see a removable chip with 8 pins. Is it that the BIOS Chip?