PC Crashing

Discussion in 'General Hardware' started by aztekxero, Jul 25, 2010.

  1. aztekxero

    aztekxero Geek Trainee

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    Recently, my PC has been randomly crashing, usually while I'm playing WoW. Sometimes, the screen will just shut off and I'll have to reboot. Other times, I will start seeing artifacts on the screen and it will just freeze. Sometimes, I will just see a bunch of weird static and I'll have to reboot. The problems only seem to have started after I swapped out an old hard drive for a new 2TB drive. Could it be that my power supply can't handle it? Or is my graphics card messed up?

    I thought that something might be overheating, so I took the side off of the case, and I try to put a big fan beside it (it's extremely hot in my apartment).

    I'm running windows 7 64 bit, Nvidia 7 series graphics card. I don't remember the wattage of my PSU, but it's an Antec and it's fairly new (1 year). Nothing super expensive, but it was mid range I believe.

    Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks.
     
  2. RHochstenbach

    RHochstenbach Administrator

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    Welcome to HWF :)

    If it happened after you switched hard drives and the monitor suddenly keeps turning off, it's indeed a sign of insufficient power from your PSU.
     
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  3. aztekxero

    aztekxero Geek Trainee

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    I realized that my initial message may have been a bit vague, so here are some clarifications.

    I have the following hardware:
    - Intel Core 2 Duo E6550 CPU
    - EVGA 680I SLI Mobo
    - EVGA Nvidia 7800GT Vid Card
    - 8 GB RAM
    - 5 Hard Drives Installed (~70GB Raptor for OS, other 4 drives range from 750GB to 2TB)
    - Windows 7 Pro 64-bit
    - Antec P180 Case (3 fans installed, one in the hard drive bay, one at the top of the case, and one at the back)

    If I recall correctly, the problem only started happening after I swapped out my 320GB hard drive for a new 2TB drive. Is the power requirement for a larger drive really enough to start to tax my PSU? I believe my PSU is somewhere around the 650W range (I'll have to double check that when I get home).

    To be more specific with the problems, it seems to happen a few times a day, over the course of 3-5 hours. Most of the time, the screen will simply shut off and I'll have to reboot. One time, I was starting to see artifacts in the graphics on the screen (things were displaying improperly in both games and in Windows). I rebooted the computer to fix it. Once, my screen just started to display this weird static and I had to reboot. Once or twice, it went straight to blue screen. These problems have always happened only when I'm gaming.

    I initially thought that it was either a heat issue or a power issue like you mentioned, but maybe this additional info will help. I might just try a new power supply, but I suppose I would need something in the 800+ W range?
     
  4. RHochstenbach

    RHochstenbach Administrator

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    The amount of Watts is not really important, but the amount of Amps is. Lower quality Power Supplies usually perform worse on a higher Wattage than higher quality Power Supplies on a lower Wattage. We have a interesting post about this topic here: http://www.hardwareforums.com/power-supply-sticky-5218/

    Now the hard drive could require more juice after an upgrade, especially if the rotation speed is faster (for example from a 5400 RPM to a 7200 RPM). I'd personally try the old hard drive again or try a different PSU if you have any, just for the sake of trying to reproduce it :)
     
  5. daz

    daz Geek

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    WOW is using a lot of processing power. Your GPU may be a problem, or your motherboard is not recognizing data properly.
     

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