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On the back of the power supply unit there is a red switch. What does that do and what to set it to for living in Ohio, North America.

2006-07-10 12:28:27 · 6 answers · asked by joey.kanta@sbcglobal.net 1 in Computers & Internet Hardware Other - Hardware

6 answers

Thats extremely vague. If it has a 0 and 1 on it, thats the powerswitch it doesn't mater though, cuz your motherboard controls it
If its a red little button and you have no clue, then save all your data, make sure your computer is plugged into a surge protector, and PUSH IT!!!! WOOOT
thats what i did, and it ended up controlling how fast my fans inside the PowerSupply went
lol
Noisy, Normal, Quiet (yet still noisy)
not sure about yours though
so either, dont' mess with it, or mess with it

2006-07-10 13:03:43 · answer #1 · answered by Eng 5 · 0 1

If this is a private computer skill furnish as pc aspects should be motor vehicle-detecting/switching, it may likely be more low priced and a lot less worry to only replace the provision being that you'll %. one up for $20-$60 everyday counting on sort/wattage. Switching skill aspects can be a soreness to artwork on and then hunting for those not basic-to-locate transistors isn't any interesting...

2016-12-01 00:46:56 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

That depends. If you want the PC to stay as a PC, 110-120. If you want a pretty fireworks display, 220. Pass the smores...

2006-07-10 12:32:58 · answer #3 · answered by sparrownightmare@verizon.net 2 · 0 0

Sparrow's answer is correct. But if you decide on the 220/240, wait until me and Sparrow get there.

2006-07-10 20:33:23 · answer #4 · answered by alchemist_n_tx 6 · 0 0

Set it to "On"

2006-07-10 12:31:36 · answer #5 · answered by robmarcy13 2 · 0 0

100 -120V

2006-07-10 12:30:33 · answer #6 · answered by rykkardo8 4 · 0 0

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