English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Please help me...my computer all of a sudden shuts down itself and keeps on turning on and off...even without the hard drive it still goes on for a second and then resets and then goes on and then resets and one time when the hard drive was in it reset during the loading of windows and fried the hard drive...even after formatting it on a seperate computer it was too fried..
.back to the resetting computer...it isn't the power supply because i replaced it with a new one thinking it was the problem but it isn't it still resets...please help!?

2006-11-28 16:59:19 · 9 answers · asked by Andrew 2 in Computers & Internet Hardware Desktops

i left the computer for a day to cool off and still it does it

2006-11-28 17:09:37 · update #1

lol how do i check for virus on motherboard

2006-11-28 17:10:18 · update #2

it doesnt even show the "make" (hp, compaq) etc.

2006-11-28 17:11:12 · update #3

no beeps.. it will stay booted up when i boot from a cd though...wierd

2006-11-28 17:24:18 · update #4

heloo! it doesnt even start to boot up the hard drive

2006-11-29 06:57:52 · update #5

9 answers

If your computer is not working properly while you are working on it, it could be a problem with device drivers, hardware or software.
Detailed instructions at http://tinyurl.com/yk5zpr

2006-11-29 03:23:01 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Most modern computers have temperature sensors on the motherboard and CPU. If the temperature on the motherboard, CPU or sometimes even inside the case gets to a pre-determined temperature, the computer will shut itself off as a self-preservation mechanism. It seems to me that one of these sensors might be fried. However, before messing with your BIOS, open the case and make sure that you blow all of the dust and lint out of all of the openings on the case, as well as any dust or lint that might be lying around inside your computer (perhaps on your heat sinks?) If this doesnt help, then you might be able to edit your BIOS. Depending on your computer, you might be able to get into the BIOS configs and override it. When you switch your computer on, hit either delete or escape (depending on the brand of your computer, it might even be some other key) and you should get a list of options. Find the one that says 'thermal protection' or something along those lines and toggle it to off.

Hope this helps.,
Vince

2006-11-28 17:07:13 · answer #2 · answered by Vince 3 · 0 0

To help diagnose the problem listen to the beeps...

No Beeps Short, No power, Bad CPU/MB, Loose Peripherals
One Beep Everything is normal and Computer POSTed fine
Two Beeps POST/CMOS Error
One Long Beep, One Short Beep Motherboard Problem
One Long Beep, Two Short Beeps Video Problem
One Long Beep, Three Short Beeps Video Problem
Three Long Beeps Keyboard Error
Repeated Long Beeps Memory Error
Continuous Hi-Lo Beeps CPU Overheating

2006-11-28 17:22:33 · answer #3 · answered by Mad Scientist 2 · 0 0

When you are ready to buy a new system, go to www.stupidcheapcomputers.net. I buy all of my stuff from them, and everything is Vista ready.

Microsoft is about to release its latest operating system, Vista, in January. It’s going to make all of these “bargain” computers nothing but JUNK as soon as it’s released. The reason that you are seeing so many cheap systems on the market right now is because a lot of them CAN’T RUN Vista and the merchants are trying to dump them as hard and fast as they can before Vista shows up and everyone learns what a piece of crap they were sold for $500 (or whatever).

Anyway, I bought a complete, new system from stupidcheapcomputers.net with a warranty for LESS than it would cost me to build it myself or order a custom one from the manufacturer. You can use my frequent buyer code: ATX926. That will get an additional 10% discount at checkout.

I have NEVER had any problems with anything that they have sold me and their customer service is outstanding. Those guys blow my mind.

Good luck!

2006-11-28 19:32:08 · answer #4 · answered by MegaNerd 3 · 0 1

first of all your laptop can no longer carry out a production facility reset without you pressing or understanding something. 2d, Norton is crap. it won't safeguard you from viruses, its an quite susceptible application. decide for something like AVG or Bullguard. Now approximately those archives. you will have the potential to accomplish a device fix by going into upload-ons then device. If no longer you are able to take your workstation to a restore save and that they might have the potential to extract your lost archives. in case you havn't pressed something then Im enormously specific your laptop hasnt completed a production facility reset. confirm your rigidity is connected exact and take a verify out restarting your workstation. If no longer take it to a restore save.

2016-10-04 12:17:04 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Did you run a memory scan by chance? It's completely possible that what was once pefectly fine memory chips somehow went funky and caused the computer to crash and reboot every time it scanned it on bootup. At what point does the computer get to before it reboots itself?

2006-11-28 17:09:42 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

check to see if the temp of the cpu and the video card is too high touch the heat sinks them may be plugged with dust

2006-11-28 17:06:44 · answer #7 · answered by Douglas G 4 · 0 0

if problem hardware:
first check of restart and on/off button
then make shore from RAM may have problem
else:
check for virus on hard or in motherboard(BIOS)

2006-11-28 17:08:53 · answer #8 · answered by jalal_aljabry 1 · 0 0

system registry problem...missing DLL file..use a recovery program dude

2006-11-28 22:16:28 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers