
Lutfij :
1| The paperclip method is actually a misleading method to diagnose if your PSU is good or not. The paper clip doesn't exert a load to determine if it can output all 1200W's of it's power in fact, did you try working with another PSU of the same wattage and quality to rule out a damaged PSU?
2| You forgot to mention the full system's specs. List them like so:
CPU:
Motherboard:
Ram:
SSD/HDD:
GPU:
PSU:
Chassis:
OS:
I don't have any spare PSU to try out. I'm wondering, if the cause is a power surge, can my PSU handle the power surge to protect the mobo?
CPU: Intel Pentium G4400 socket 1151
Motherboard: Asrock H110 Pro BTC+
Ram: Kingston Hyperx Fury 4GB DDR4
SSD/HDD: Kingston 2.5" A400 120GB SSD
GPU: MSI GTX 1080ti
PSU: Cosair AX1200i
Chassis: (None) I'm using an open frame. The frame is aluminum. The mobo is lying on a plywood held by the aluminum frame. Plywood thickness is 3mm. The GPU is connected on the PCIe slot, so no riser.
OS: Windows 10 Home
Источник: https://forums.tomshardware.com/threads/motherboards-system-wont-power-on-after-a-power-outage-in-our-area.3225120/
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