First post, by Smedis2
- Rank
- Newbie
I'm going to formally apologize for "old hardware gore". I've been doing this mostly by feeling it through and doing basic research. This is my attempt to atone for my sins and not create even more e-waste and wasted paychecks. This involves putting a PC in a case for the seemingly uber rare Intergraph TDZ-2000 if you want a full preparation of how much debauchery is afoot here.
Hi, everyone! I've been having a hell of a time recently trying to build a Socket A PC. I got the thing to boot exactly once, and now it's refused to cooperate for the past two days before I've even managed to put in any sort of storage medium. I swear there was a POST beep when it first launched, but now the fans just spin up and nothing else. The AGP slot seems to be getting power as the GPU's fan also spins.

I attempted to install this in a case that I got for free at VCF Midwest a couple of years ago that was sitting around. It seemed to have integrated standoff screws, little popped-up doohickeys with screw holes. I theorized that maybe the case was shorting it, but things got even more confusing as time progressed. I have tried swapping the RAM and taking out the GPU to see if it would react, but it acts the same no matter what. Fans spin up, nothing else. Ditto for the battery and the CMOS.

I have 2 PSUs I've attempted to use on the thing. I speculated that the one I got from eBay, a Sparkle FSP300-60BT might've gone bad in shipping, but since we were already at the point of seemingly no return, I put in a DELL PSU from a Dimension in there as well to no avail. This would be a footnote if it weren't for the fact that the Dell now no longer properly powers up and seems to behave in the same sort of catatonic state the WinFast board does. LED on board, fans spin, no other signs of life. The Sparkle PSU was not put into it, to add even more layers of confusion.
I have two more mobos coming in the mail alongside a more "proper" case not sourced from some wacky old CAD computer, and I'm now extra paranoid I've missed the point entirely and I'm going to nuke those in the process as well. Have I doomed myself to a life of killing vintage hardware over and over again like some sort of crappy Greek legend? This has actually been getting on my nerves and I think it's sensible to say I would prefer not wasting more cash and braincells on this given it was meant to be a passion project.
My own personal theories are
A) The motherboard itself was bad to begin with
B) The constant moving around of things during assembly killed something
C) I have really shitty power supplies
D) It's something really obvious and stupid I didn't consider like the wall it's plugged into
MOBO: Foxconn Winfast 748K7AA
CPU: Sempron 2400MHZ
GPU: ATI Radeon 9550 256MB AGP
3GB of RAM

