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Notes -
This is as good a place to ask for technical support as any I guess:
For the past few months, my pc has been consistently crashing under heavy load, in graphically demanding games like Escape from Tarkov, Warhammer 3 etc. In normal use and less intensive games like Rimworld, no issues.
After about 15-20 min of gameplay, I get a full crash to a black screen with the pc powered off, and it refuses to post for several minutes regardless of what I do, at which point it often restarts on its own. The American Megatrends screen doesn't usually show up unless I cycle power, at which point it doesn't tell me anything useful either.
The crash seems to be so total and abrupt that I can't find any useful logs to figure out wtf is going on.
I've run CPU and GPU stress tests on OCCT and furmark, and they only seem to cause issues unreliably.
It seems thermally related, since the problem is less severe when the AC is running, but unfortunately the AC is currently on the fritz exacerbating the issue, but fixing the AC isnt really a definitive solution is it?
I noticed >85° C temps on my Ryzen 5600x, so I changed the thermal paste, and while temps dropped by 5-10 degrees, the crashing hasn't abated.
GPU temps hover in the 50s-60s range in Tarkov, which seems quite reasonable. It's a 3070 for what that's worth.
The other potential culprit is my geriatric 600w power supply, over 10 years old at this point, but why would it be thermally related?
I'm not running any OCs, and I've maxxed out my fan curves to help, not that it's doing much. My case has two extra blowers, and I even took off the sides to help with airflow.
Anyone have any idea as to how I can figure out what exactly is wrong? I can't really afford to replace my GPU, but I could consider buying a new PSU if need be.
This issue didn't plague me when I first built this current setup with the same components, but it's been several months and I'm losing my mind :(
If the PC just refuses to power up, it must be the PSU. You're probably tripping its internal safeguards.
Hmm, is there any way to know for sure? I'm willing to gamble on it, but it's still a decent chunk of dough!
Multimeter, pull the leads, test
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Do you have a friend with a working PC? Ask them if they can part with their PSU for an afternoon.
My brother has a pc next room over, but he certainly won't consent to the rigmarole of disassembling both of ours twice to test.
You make it sound like a chore. Unplugging it from the mobo is the only annoying task and even it isn't that bad.
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Swapping out individual components until you determine which is is faulty is the only way to be sure. But to my layman's ears, it sounds a lot like PSU problems I've had before.
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