LeeJend said:No offence but my first guess would be that you plugged a power connector in backwards. It is possible. I did it once on a quad fan controller with a loose molex conenctor on it.
My second guess would be to blame the new kid on the block. That's the video card. Look for scrapes on the metal, crooked heatsinks, bulging capacitors, cracked or discolored chips by the voltage regulator, etc.
Antec and any other good power supply should have overload protection. They shutdown if you draw too much power. Smoke is not an option to an overload.
Just a side note, while the PSU is designed to shutdown on overload, (here is the oxymoron part, but kinda neat) they are also designed (Antec anyway accouding to them) to absorb the full force of a short or overload by killing power from the PSU to the board, but keeping the ground path open back to the PSU while the PSU stays up to "take the hit" and sacrifice its self.LeeJend said:No offence but my first guess would be that you plugged a power connector in backwards. It is possible. I did it once on a quad fan controller with a loose molex conenctor on it.
My second guess would be to blame the new kid on the block. That's the video card. Look for scrapes on the metal, crooked heatsinks, bulging capacitors, cracked or discolored chips by the voltage regulator, etc.
Antec and any other good power supply should have overload protection. They shutdown if you draw too much power. Smoke is not an option to an overload.
Yeah and the wait is the draw back to warantee work. I now buy cheap end stuff and toss it. Note my MB brand.
As for checking out what you have left is there anyone who would let you try your RAM and CPU in their MB? Do not try a new RAM or CPU in that MB. It's dangerous until after you prove your CPU and RAM were not fried. I keep a pile of old stuff around for just these kinds of crisis. Actually it's in my AVATAR the pile of junk on the left is a fully operational XP2000 system.
Antec was VERY helpfull for me when my PSU died, and offered to rush ship me a replacement. Granted they were only a 2 hour drive from where I lived in Cali so I just paid a personal visit. But you do have to ship them your suspected dead components so they can verify that the PSU caused the damage.melon said:*sigh* I seem to be doing everything wrong.I will call Antec tomorrow; if they really are that helpful, I will RMA the other PSU and eat the shipping / 15% restocking fee on the other, or sell it on eBay.
So you think it could be a defective video card? I wish there was a way to know, without taking all the time and shipping costs to RMA everything and try again. I wish I wasn't working on such a ****ing deadline! I'm probably now going to have to live at school now, while I wait for all the warranty processing, returns, and the time it'll take them all to reship the ****.
Melon
Maveric169 said:I still don't think that you over-worked that 430W PSU, you most likley just got a bad one like I did. Glad to hear that everything worked out!![]()