A very strange thing happens. Suddenly, the computer went out and stopped turning on. By pressing the power button for half a second, the coolers twitch and then silence. Disconnected / connected in turn all peripherals and came to the conclusion - the CPU radiator interferes. If you remove it, the computer turns on, standard BIOS messages appear on the monitor, and as usual, I did not wait for the OS to load, because The processor is still without cooling. I changed the thermal paste, put the radiator in place and again the same nonsense. I remove the radiator - it works. Socket 1150. Actually the question itself: how is it then ??? How can a radiator interfere? I understand the RAM may fail, or BP, or something else, but not the radiator. So advise something, please.

  • There was exactly the same situation. Oddly enough, long dances with a tambourine helped. After a mean male tear (figuratively, of course) and a couple of days of felting on the bed and staring into the void (on the systemist), he miraculously joined in. And if the case, then check the correctness of the connection of the cooler, I had this even after updating the CPU, motherboard and incorrect installation of the cooler (I didn’t fully reach the foot, AM2 socket like). - smellyshovel
  • one
    Try to install it at once gently (put the case on the barrels), just attach the cooler without fixing it (and not connecting it to the CPU FAN), then fix it without connecting. And then connect. Look at which of the stages takes off. Well, from this dance. The tambourine has never failed. - smellyshovel
  • Is the radiator or cooler a problem? Visually check the legs on the socket. - Andrew Hobbit
  • and who is a "raboator"? - aleksandr barakin
  • @alexander for sure, not that)) Fixed)) - SHSERG

1 answer 1

The reason was that the radiator pad slightly protruded over the edges of the socket and touched the legs of the capacitor. Moreover, this problem is known to those who collected this sistemnik in the store, because next to it was a piece of electrical tape, which was apparently enclosed by these masters. From here I draw a conclusion that it is better to assemble a computer with my own hand. Well, in the case: the familiar master undermined the protruding platform and, just in case, applied a small coat of varnish, so that it certainly would not short out, although the distance is now more or less decent to the condenser's legs.