Quote:
Originally posted by notsobetter
The first thing to do is check the capacitors on the board. If you see any of them, large or small, that are pushed up then you have a bad board. They should all be flat. ANY rise in the capacitors will result in your problem.
Second. Unplug all devices from the powersupply. That includes modmes, networkcards etc....Just have the video, memory and CPU plugged in. If it boots, then begin replacing the cards and plugging things back in. If it's a crad then it's probably a modem or network card causing the problem.
Take the CPU out and re-seat it.
If you still have no power then most likely it's a bad powersupply or something else on the board.
It has power, just won't boot. I'm gonna try it outside the case and see what happens. It looks, though, like studio has the right idea. The idea was nagging at the back of my head, but I couldn't figure out why I thought that, so I didn't check it.