HCHTech
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 4,252
- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA - USA
I had someone drop off a behemoth of a computer a couple of days ago. It was a giant gaming desktop with a case proudly titled "Herculean", LOL. Any, it had been shipped and was delivered damaged. It would no longer boot. The young buck wanted just a diagnostic before proceeding. Fine, says I. We charge a flat 1/2 hour fee for diagnostics, applied to the cost of repair should they decide to proceed.
So I drag this hulk to my bench to assess the damage. One of the feet is broken off, the whole case looks torqued a bit, it's no longer a rectangle, but more of a parallelogram. Clear 1/8" gaps on the top left and bottom right of the side panels, while the top right and bottom left edges were overlapping the frame. The window plexy in the side panel was broken on one corner. This thing was clearly dropped hard. I get it apart and see the drive tray with a 4TB WD-Black is cornerwise in the cage, while the 500G SSD apparently survived.
I pull the spinning drive to test it, fails a short test after 20 seconds with a read failure. Check.
The giant graphics card (what, no SLA?) is partially out of it's slot, so I remove it, do a visual and then re-mount it.
Looking around, I see that every wire is unplugged except for the front panel connections and the EL wire that was everywhere. This couldn't have happened by accident, it must have been done by who ever packed it for shipping. I guess that makes sense (Um...no wonder it wouldn't boot?). So after looking around for anything else that didn't look right (didn't find anything), I hook everything back up. Including the obnoxiously-placed CPU 12v connector that had to be wedged under a little plastic wire race that ran along the back and top edges. Who thinks of these things, anyway?
Run hardware diags on the rest and get a RAM failure. There are 4x8GB sticks, so I go about retesting to see if I can find out whether it is one or more sticks, or one or more bad slots. Can't remove the sticks without removing the water-cooling system radiator - oh great. Have to remove the false plastic top of the case (with spring-loaded louvers for extra air flow!!) and see that three of the 4 plastic clips that hold it down are broken.
So I figure a way to keep the water cooling in place with the radiator propped up, and after 8 iterations or so, find that there is a single bad RAM stick, and all of the slots appear to work ok.
I get it back together without the bad RAM stick or the failing spinning HD, and sure enough, it boots up fine.
Total time invested, Oh, maybe 2 hours. I make my notes and give the guy a call to report my findings and find out if he wants a summary for the insurance company or just to proceed with the repair. "Oh, no", says he. "I can fix it - I just wanted to find out what was wrong -- Can I pick it up this afternoon?"
So I drag this hulk to my bench to assess the damage. One of the feet is broken off, the whole case looks torqued a bit, it's no longer a rectangle, but more of a parallelogram. Clear 1/8" gaps on the top left and bottom right of the side panels, while the top right and bottom left edges were overlapping the frame. The window plexy in the side panel was broken on one corner. This thing was clearly dropped hard. I get it apart and see the drive tray with a 4TB WD-Black is cornerwise in the cage, while the 500G SSD apparently survived.
I pull the spinning drive to test it, fails a short test after 20 seconds with a read failure. Check.
The giant graphics card (what, no SLA?) is partially out of it's slot, so I remove it, do a visual and then re-mount it.
Looking around, I see that every wire is unplugged except for the front panel connections and the EL wire that was everywhere. This couldn't have happened by accident, it must have been done by who ever packed it for shipping. I guess that makes sense (Um...no wonder it wouldn't boot?). So after looking around for anything else that didn't look right (didn't find anything), I hook everything back up. Including the obnoxiously-placed CPU 12v connector that had to be wedged under a little plastic wire race that ran along the back and top edges. Who thinks of these things, anyway?
Run hardware diags on the rest and get a RAM failure. There are 4x8GB sticks, so I go about retesting to see if I can find out whether it is one or more sticks, or one or more bad slots. Can't remove the sticks without removing the water-cooling system radiator - oh great. Have to remove the false plastic top of the case (with spring-loaded louvers for extra air flow!!) and see that three of the 4 plastic clips that hold it down are broken.
So I figure a way to keep the water cooling in place with the radiator propped up, and after 8 iterations or so, find that there is a single bad RAM stick, and all of the slots appear to work ok.
I get it back together without the bad RAM stick or the failing spinning HD, and sure enough, it boots up fine.
Total time invested, Oh, maybe 2 hours. I make my notes and give the guy a call to report my findings and find out if he wants a summary for the insurance company or just to proceed with the repair. "Oh, no", says he. "I can fix it - I just wanted to find out what was wrong -- Can I pick it up this afternoon?"