Reply 20 of 65, by Standard Def Steve
I had a 2007 era Corsair HX 620 slowly kill two boards, but not in the way you'd expect a PSU to take out a motherboard.
In both cases, the motherboards slowly started failing, piece by piece, in exactly the same way. It around two months for each board to completely fail after the first symptoms started appearing. First, the NIC would go, followed by a few of the USB ports. Then the PCIe x1 slot that hosted the sound card would stop working. Eventually, the boards would stop POSTing.
The first time this happened, I didn't even suspect the PSU (I mean, who would? The way it failed, I assumed it was some chipset-related fault)! So I replaced the motherboard--an old Asus LGA1155 model of some sort--with a Gigabyte 1155 board. The Gigabyte worked well for around 6 months...and then the same series of failures started occurring. And get this: a few days before it completely stopped working, I started getting Windows activation errors.
I finally tested the power supply after that second board stopped POSTing, and indeed, one of the output rails was just all over the map. Curious, I hooked up the Corsair to an old S478 board that I didn't give a damn about. That board wouldn't even start immediately; the CPU fan would merely twitch. I think I had to jab the power button 5 or 6 times before it finally roared to life. Once it did get going, it had no problem booting into Windows, though who knows how long that would've lasted. Hooked up to a known good PSU, the S478 board would always fire up on the first try.
"A little sign-in here, a touch of WiFi there..."