Sunday evening my daughter was playing on the PC and it just shut off. I goto turn it back on and the fans did like a half turn and nothing. The MB still had the green light like it was getting power though. I unplugged it, let it sit for like an hour and try again still nothing. I took it out of the PC and tried to kick it on manually and nothing. It was a thermaltake TR-2 600W I do think it lasted 8+yrs, I just thought it was odd for a PSU to die out of the blue w/ no warning. I got a corsair cx650M and everything is working again.
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I have seen a few just kaput, or explode, or both. But mostly, you find out you have a bad PSU only after you had bad RAM, bad hard drives, bad motherboards, etc.
Brenics ~ Just to point out I do believe Chris Roberts is going down as the man who cheated backers and took down crowdfunding for gaming.
A lot of hardware failures that aren't directly and obviously ~THE Power Supply~ are actually caused by poor quality and/or failing power supplies.
Most people assume just because the computer turns on the PSU is fine. A poor or failing power supply can wreck havoc on components - VRMs in GPUs, hard drives, and motherboards are particularly sensitive, because those are usually the first components in line from the PSU.
The PSU doesn't need to catch on fire to be bad. It doesn't even need to fail to turn on. All it needs to do is fail to regulate voltage properly, and it will start breaking other things... and if you don't think to check for it, you'd be none the wiser, replacing the broken component only for that replacement, or something else, to fail soon later on down the line.
Can I prove that? No. I can't. Not without some expensive testing equipment. But I've seen an awful lot of computers where Part A goes, and that gets fixed. Then a few weeks/months later Part B goes. Then Part C goes. And usually somewhere between B and C the owner decides the computer has just had it, and replaces the entire thing outright. Parting out the machine the rest of the components usually do ok - until the machine the PSU gets parted out to mysteriously starts doing the same thing. I've seen that trend a handful of times - enough to make me believe, but not enough to be able to offer any concrete proof.
I believe enough that I won't reuse a PSU from an older build any longer, and if I do a major upgrade of anything in a computer (major is relative, I would say that could be synonymous with "Expensive"), I'll replace the PSU as well if it's got any significant age to it just out of caution. In servers at work we swap HDDs every 3 years and PSUs every 5 years just because it's a lot cheaper than any downtime from failure.
Brenics ~ Just to point out I do believe Chris Roberts is going down as the man who cheated backers and took down crowdfunding for gaming.