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DaveW
Thanks. I guess I have a couple of options: 1 - Replace the six-year-
old machine in its entirety, or 2 - try this approach.
If I chose the former (since I don't have another power supply), I
need to replace the PS, MB, RAM and CPU. I can salvage the case, NIC,
HDs, video card, sound card, and DVD burner. Never having done this
before, is this going to be much of a problem?
> It mainly sounds like a PSU failure, but the only way to make sure that it
> isn't also/or a motherboard problem is to replace the PSU with a good known
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>
> > Athlon 1.2GHz, 640MB SDRAM, ASUS A7?266 MB, WinXP SP2
Ed M. - 27 Aug 2007 14:07 GMT
> Thanks. I guess I have a couple of options: 1 - Replace the six-year-
> old machine in its entirety, or 2 - try this approach.
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> HDs, video card, sound card, and DVD burner. Never having done this
> before, is this going to be much of a problem?
It shouldn't be all that difficult. Just take your time and you should be
fine. At six years old, your system is pretty much out of date unless all
you do is word processing, email and browsing. You might have a problem
using your present video card as a lot of the later MBs don't have AGP slots
anymore. A basic PCI-E video card can be purchased well under $100.00US
unless your do some heavy gaming and then you can more than double that cost
for a decent, middle of the road card. Most heavier gamers are using the
Nvidia 8800 series cards that can be priced from the mid-$300s up to $700+.
Ed
Brigadier - 30 Sep 2007 22:50 GMT
> > old machine in its entirety, or 2 - try this approach.
>
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>
> Ed
Thanks, all. Power supply replaced easily and the systems is stable.
No MB problems so far.
DJM