Re: Aluminium intel iMac (2007 model), wont POST, no chime, bad PSU?
Hey Keebler64,
Thanks for the notes on reflowing the GPU with the alum shield and heat torch method. =),
I've come to the conclusion that I well fried the original GPU card after doing an oven reflow and getting distracted, =(, "woops", =p
still, I ended up finding a cheap HD 2600 GPU card on ebay (pulled working from a working iMac with LCD screen damage).
I popped that in and after a bit of fiddling, (I think I might have tried reseating RAM, scrubbing the DIMM slots with a toothbrush with methyl spirits to really clean the terminals, etc..)
The iMac seemed to buzz back to life!,
I used it totally fine for about 2 weeks, put a new 1tb HD in it, and dual booted it, and it was running flawlessly.
I had iStat menu's installed, and was monitoring the temps and voltages constantly.
I initially found that there was a little bit of strange behaviour with processing and some glitches, but it never froze completely.
I wondered if the 0.91v for the CPU cores was a bit too low for what it was wanting for stability, so I disabled 1 of the cores, (which seemed to set the voltage for the active core to a default of 1.17v, and it never really moved from this).
Initially, after disabling one of the CPU cores, the iMac ran like a dream!, =)
I even spent hours on it back and forth between OSX and Win XP jailbreaking and unlocking my iPhone!, ^_^
...
Then, after about 2 weeks, some of the funny old symptoms returned,
it began to freeze and lock up during use, then over just a few hours, it returned to how it was when I started, no boot, no chime, sometimes it will boot to OSX loading grey screen if I mess around with SMC resets and PRAM resets, but it always freezes within a minute or 2 of booting.
All I can think of is that either:
a) The GPU was the cause of the problem, and the new (used) one fixed it, until it too started to suffer the same issues?, it never seemed to be overheating from the temps on iStat, but the fact that it ALWAYS showed 0.00v and 0.01amp in iStat's voltage measuring worried me.
or
b) That the problem was never really "solved", and that some broken or faulty component became "happy" again for a short time (either through heat related issues deteriorating it, or perhaps a physical bump/moving/cold solder joint kind of issue?
Strangely though, when it was suddenly working like a dream (I even put it all back together, thats how working it was, =p)
I thought that it might have been a fragile thing, so I tried all sorts of things to upset it. I.e., physically moving it, shaking it, tapping it while running, shaking it while it was running hot (don't worry spinning Hard Drive fans, I had it booted from an external at this point, and the internal drive disconnected =p), running it through various test procedures, benchmark rendering and hard processor tasks, and it flew through them all like a breeze!
- I think that I might try removing the GPU card again, and seeing if it will boot, chime + log into OSX, to see if I can SSH in and screen share it, to see if it is stable again.
If it is, it is definitely pointing to some kind of GPU issues which cause the system to freeze (not just display connection, file sharing drops out, itunes music crashes/loops on the millisecond that it was up to in the song (like a scratched CD), etc.., so what ever is getting tripped, trips the whole system.
Grrr*
Hey Keebler64,
Thanks for the notes on reflowing the GPU with the alum shield and heat torch method. =),
I've come to the conclusion that I well fried the original GPU card after doing an oven reflow and getting distracted, =(, "woops", =p
still, I ended up finding a cheap HD 2600 GPU card on ebay (pulled working from a working iMac with LCD screen damage).
I popped that in and after a bit of fiddling, (I think I might have tried reseating RAM, scrubbing the DIMM slots with a toothbrush with methyl spirits to really clean the terminals, etc..)
The iMac seemed to buzz back to life!,
I used it totally fine for about 2 weeks, put a new 1tb HD in it, and dual booted it, and it was running flawlessly.
I had iStat menu's installed, and was monitoring the temps and voltages constantly.
I initially found that there was a little bit of strange behaviour with processing and some glitches, but it never froze completely.
I wondered if the 0.91v for the CPU cores was a bit too low for what it was wanting for stability, so I disabled 1 of the cores, (which seemed to set the voltage for the active core to a default of 1.17v, and it never really moved from this).
Initially, after disabling one of the CPU cores, the iMac ran like a dream!, =)
I even spent hours on it back and forth between OSX and Win XP jailbreaking and unlocking my iPhone!, ^_^
...
Then, after about 2 weeks, some of the funny old symptoms returned,
it began to freeze and lock up during use, then over just a few hours, it returned to how it was when I started, no boot, no chime, sometimes it will boot to OSX loading grey screen if I mess around with SMC resets and PRAM resets, but it always freezes within a minute or 2 of booting.
All I can think of is that either:
a) The GPU was the cause of the problem, and the new (used) one fixed it, until it too started to suffer the same issues?, it never seemed to be overheating from the temps on iStat, but the fact that it ALWAYS showed 0.00v and 0.01amp in iStat's voltage measuring worried me.
or
b) That the problem was never really "solved", and that some broken or faulty component became "happy" again for a short time (either through heat related issues deteriorating it, or perhaps a physical bump/moving/cold solder joint kind of issue?
Strangely though, when it was suddenly working like a dream (I even put it all back together, thats how working it was, =p)
I thought that it might have been a fragile thing, so I tried all sorts of things to upset it. I.e., physically moving it, shaking it, tapping it while running, shaking it while it was running hot (don't worry spinning Hard Drive fans, I had it booted from an external at this point, and the internal drive disconnected =p), running it through various test procedures, benchmark rendering and hard processor tasks, and it flew through them all like a breeze!
- I think that I might try removing the GPU card again, and seeing if it will boot, chime + log into OSX, to see if I can SSH in and screen share it, to see if it is stable again.
If it is, it is definitely pointing to some kind of GPU issues which cause the system to freeze (not just display connection, file sharing drops out, itunes music crashes/loops on the millisecond that it was up to in the song (like a scratched CD), etc.., so what ever is getting tripped, trips the whole system.
Grrr*

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