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Báo cáo lỗi dịch thuật
Then use the beep code to narrow down problems from there.
I have a few laying around, so not an issue for me to just grab one and plug it in; though they are cheap.
Do you smell any burning near the PSU?
Is anything on the Motherboard damaged? (Burns, caps popped, etc?)
I suspect this is the culprit, in reality the power capability is ~300W continuous at best since they are rated at peak power. Get a replacement and hope the other parts are ok, and at a minimum get a 1000J or higher surge protector and maybe some roach traps if there are any dead ones that are burned up in the old PSU (maybe they caused it??)
Might be good to give it a paper clip test[www.blogtechtips.com] just to confirm it's dead.
buy/use a quality brand like seasonic focus
I mean, sure, it probably is, but that's what process of elimination is designed to find out.
Why spend the money / time buying a new PSU, only to find that it could just be the CPU that died?
Start with the cheap options, like I mentioned, speaker/beeper, see what the issue is from that, then move from there.
Plus a speaker costs what, a quid, where as a new (good) PSU can set you back like 60 quid.
Especially with his cockroach infestation, which do like to crawl into warm places.
https://kotaku.com/console-repairmen-explain-why-cockroaches-love-ps4s-1794393470
First, leaving it on 24/7 could have shortened the lifespan of a component, especially if the old low quality ones. Second, never clean electronic components frequently. There is too great a risk of breaking a fragile part or generating static electricity. It is usual practice in professional IT to ban all cleaning of systems. If it isn't broken don't try to fix it, leave it alone.
The power button doesn't necessarily turn the power off completely. I could be wrong but I think what it does is configured in windows. Also quite often the button isn't connected to the mobo correctly, so it doesn't do anything. Not sure though. You always have to turn off the psu to turn the power off and then leave it for a few seconds for power to drain.
If it's a cheap Chinese psu then that's the first thing to check. But if it doesn't work because you were doing something to it then that's the first thing to check.
I don't think it's a bad idea to hit the heat sinks with compressed air every once in a while, maybe once a year or more depending on if you have pets or smoke/live with a smoker. Pull any filters and wipe them down maybe once a month when they look gunky. I agree to your point though that I wouldn't do a lot of 'hands on' work very often.
If there is, it could have damaged either motherboard or PSU when it happened. First thing will be turning on PSU (if it turns on without videocard its fine, no need to use paperclip) and checking voltages. If that's fine - try to find known good videocard and test things with it. If it does not work - most likely something died on the motherboard.
Might also try using another known good PSU if you can find one, just do not buy one for no reason - yours is, most likely, fine.
And DO NOT try your videocard in another PC without verifying if it has short circuit, as it kill those PC too. And do not try it multiple times in yours either - can do more damage.
Can try removing hatsink from videocard and looking carefully at power-related things, might be something physically burnt there...