Well that was a good call. It crashed again
Pc shuts off randomly
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Originally posted by problemhaverI have a Segotep GM850 PSU
I had to go to the Segotep homepage to find any warranty information and what I found was poor, it just says that PSUs have a five year warranty which in itself shows how much or should I say lack of confidence that they have in their own product, any decent Gold efficiency rated PSU will have a minimum of a seven year warranty and those units are deemed to be the budget Gold efficiency rated range by the brand that makes them
Regarding the PCI-e 5.1 label that Segotep have stuck on the PSUs box, the claim is a load of the brown stuff intended to mislead and/or impress, only GPUs and the GPU slots on MBs come under the umbrella of anything that is PCI-e related, nowt else.
Fwiw, the first review that I read for the PSU gave it one star as it was bad.
Originally posted by problemhaverPreviously i had a agk750W PSU
Power Profile
Active power scheme: [COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]Atlas Power Scheme
Change the Windows Power Plan to Balanced, Ultra and High Performance etc are a form of overclocking that is known to cause stability and overheating issues, the setting should only be used for gaming type notebooks that have a discrete GPU that needs the extra power, all that any other power plan does is mess with the CPUs cores and cause overheating and especially the innards of lesser brand PSUs.
Originally posted by problemhaverWell that was a good call. It crashed again
Software such as Windows can crash and when it does crash you get a BSOD and when enabled a crash dmp is generated, programs or games when they crash can on occasion close to the desktop but the computer will still be 100% functional.
Hardware failure such as a weak power supply and/or overheating are not software related and when a computer for example suddenly turns off, freezes or the screen goes black etc the behaviour should be described as the “computer shut down unexpectedly” or froze etc and not as having crashed as the latter implies a software issue as opposed to an obvious hardware issue when described properly.
Having the correct info means that helpers will not be looking for a software issue when the problem is clearly hardware related.[/COLOR]Comment
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Originally posted by problemhaverI have a Segotep GM850 PSU
I had to go to the Segotep homepage to find any warranty information and what I found was poor, it just says that PSUs have a five year warranty which in itself shows how much or should I say lack of confidence that they have in their own product, any decent Gold efficiency rated PSU will have a minimum of a seven year warranty and those units are deemed to be the budget Gold efficiency rated range by the brand that makes them
Regarding the PCI-e 5.1 label that Segotep have stuck on the PSUs box, the claim is a load of the brown stuff intended to mislead and/or impress, only GPUs and the GPU slots on MBs come under the umbrella of anything that is PCI-e related, nowt else.
Fwiw, the first review that I read for the PSU gave it one star as it was bad.
Originally posted by problemhaverPreviously i had a agk750W PSU
Power Profile
Active power scheme: [COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]Atlas Power Scheme
Change the Windows Power Plan to Balanced, Ultra and High Performance etc are a form of overclocking that is known to cause stability and overheating issues, the setting should only be used for gaming type notebooks that have a discrete GPU that needs the extra power, all that any other power plan does is mess with the CPUs cores and cause overheating and especially the innards of lesser brand PSUs.
Originally posted by problemhaverWell that was a good call. It crashed again
Software such as Windows can crash and when it does crash you get a BSOD and when enabled a crash dmp is generated, programs or games when they crash can on occasion close to the desktop but the computer will still be 100% functional.
Hardware failure such as a weak power supply and/or overheating are not software related and when a computer for example suddenly turns off, freezes or the screen goes black etc the behaviour should be described as the “computer shut down unexpectedly” or froze etc and not as having crashed as the latter implies a software issue as opposed to an obvious hardware issue when described properly.
Having the correct info means that helpers will not be looking for a software issue when the problem is clearly hardware related.[/COLOR]Comment
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Hi! Sorry for the late reply.
This is the power supply i had:
It definitely was a bad PSU.
I went ahead and changed my power plan to balanced.
In regards to exactly what happend:
I was playing Minecraft while recording with OBS (tho its happened many times when doing many different things)
when out of nowhere my PC turns off. The lights stay on, but the screen stays lit up (tho black) After about 3-5 seconds i see my mouse on the black screen, and then windows pops up saying “Closing apps then shutting down: OBS (and any other apps that have unsaved data ect)”. And then i can click shut down or cancel.
clicking cancel returns me to my desktop.Comment
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Hi! Sorry for the late reply.
This is the power supply i had:
It definitely was a bad PSU.
I went ahead and changed my power plan to balanced.
In regards to exactly what happend:
I was playing Minecraft while recording with OBS (tho its happened many times when doing many different things)
when out of nowhere my PC turns off. The lights stay on, but the screen stays lit up (tho black) After about 3-5 seconds i see my mouse on the black screen, and then windows pops up saying “Closing apps then shutting down: OBS (and any other apps that have unsaved data ect)”. And then i can click shut down or cancel.
clicking cancel returns me to my desktop.Comment
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Originally posted by problemhaverThis is the power supply i had:
Amazon.com [COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)] It definitely was a bad PSU.
[/COLOR]
Bit of an understatement Im afraid, I suggest that you get your GPU tested on a family member or friends PC that has the appropriate spec of PSU, alternatively ask a local tech what they would charge you for testing it, the replacement PSU is marginally better than the original which may unfortunately have damaged your card.
There are things to be done with your set up but before we elaborate can you first of all address and provide the relevant feedback for each of the the points raised by Bruce in reply #4;
Originally posted by BruceYour TCP Connections (last group at the bottom of Speccy) is impressive to say the least. Most I’ve ever seen on a system.
That isn’t to say it’s a bad thing, just that you have A LOT of ports actively open and ‘phoning home’.
Your monitors are at different frequencies, we’ve seen issues on this forum regarding that aspect, let’s see if I remember who had that experience: @PeterOz @Pyro @Malnutrition @xrobwx71
Your BIOS is July 2023, latest is Feb 2025. There may be code updates that address your issue.
Your motherboard handles memory speeds up to 5200 before over-clocking is required, so I reckon having XMP memory mode turned on isn’t giving you any benefit. Try turning it off and see how things go.
Take note of the memory timings in BIOS before and after changing XMP to check that with it enabled, it does actually force the memory to run at its full speedComment
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Originally posted by problemhaverThis is the power supply i had:
Amazon.com [COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)] It definitely was a bad PSU.
[/COLOR]
Bit of an understatement Im afraid, I suggest that you get your GPU tested on a family member or friends PC that has the appropriate spec of PSU, alternatively ask a local tech what they would charge you for testing it, the replacement PSU is marginally better than the original which may unfortunately have damaged your card.
There are things to be done with your set up but before we elaborate can you first of all address and provide the relevant feedback for each of the the points raised by Bruce in reply #4;
Originally posted by BruceYour TCP Connections (last group at the bottom of Speccy) is impressive to say the least. Most I’ve ever seen on a system.
That isn’t to say it’s a bad thing, just that you have A LOT of ports actively open and ‘phoning home’.
Your monitors are at different frequencies, we’ve seen issues on this forum regarding that aspect, let’s see if I remember who had that experience: @PeterOz @Pyro @Malnutrition @xrobwx71
Your BIOS is July 2023, latest is Feb 2025. There may be code updates that address your issue.
Your motherboard handles memory speeds up to 5200 before over-clocking is required, so I reckon having XMP memory mode turned on isn’t giving you any benefit. Try turning it off and see how things go.
Take note of the memory timings in BIOS before and after changing XMP to check that with it enabled, it does actually force the memory to run at its full speedComment
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Ok.
Many of the open ports are for a Plex server and others are for file sharing over Steam. Firefox also seems to have a lot but im not too worried about that.
Ill test my GPU, i think my brother has one i could use to test. Thanks again!Comment
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Ok.
Many of the open ports are for a Plex server and others are for file sharing over Steam. Firefox also seems to have a lot but im not too worried about that.
Ill test my GPU, i think my brother has one i could use to test. Thanks again!Comment
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Originally posted by problemhaverMany of the open ports are for a Plex server and others are for file sharing over Steam. Firefox also seems to have a lot but im not too worried about that.Comment
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Originally posted by problemhaverMany of the open ports are for a Plex server and others are for file sharing over Steam. Firefox also seems to have a lot but im not too worried about that.Comment
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oh 100%
I used to have ethernet but i moved setups, and the router is in a annoying location etc
Luckily i dont play many games competitively. The biggest down side is the plex server is absolute dog ****.
But with that aside it looks like its not the GPU. I swapped it with a GTX 1650 and it crashed withing 30 mins.
My mind initially jumps to the MOBO/CPU as the next culprits.Comment
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oh 100%
I used to have ethernet but i moved setups, and the router is in a annoying location etc
Luckily i dont play many games competitively. The biggest down side is the plex server is absolute dog ****.
But with that aside it looks like its not the GPU. I swapped it with a GTX 1650 and it crashed withing 30 mins.
My mind initially jumps to the MOBO/CPU as the next culprits.Comment
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