Bad Mobo VRM - Symptoms?

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Cableaddict
    New Member
    • Nov 2016
    • 8
    • USA

    #1

    Bad Mobo VRM - Symptoms?

    This will be a long post, but someone please, PLEASE try to answer my questions at the end. I can’t find this info anywhere:


    I suspect my mobo’s vrm circuit is wonky. (details, below) However, I don’t yet have the knowledge to test it directly. REGARDLESS, I’d like to know if the following symptoms do indeed suggest a bad vrm, or if my problems likely lie elsewhere.
    ———————————

    Background:

    EVGA mATX X99 mobo, 2 years old.
    Win10-64.
    Used for live music performance, and the system had been rock solid for about 18 months. - Then it got rained on just before an important gig. I had no choice but to run it anyway, holding my breath. It booted & ran, but blue-screened about 15 minutes later.
    ————————————————————————

    The symptoms:

    Since the above debacle, I get bluescreens, apps crashes, and restarts maybe 2X a day, if it’s run continuously.
    The ram, drives, etc all test fine.
    Nothing has changed with my software.
    I’ve deleted & replaced most drivers, and with the same driver versions.

    There also doesn't appear to be any micro cracks on the mobo, which is common with portable rigs. No problems when rocking or shaking the thing.
    —————————————————————————

    WHAT I’VE TESTED:

    Naturally, I suspected a bad psu or a bad mobo.

    ### I checked the voltages with CPUID and Speedfan, and the 12v rail read very low. ~ 8.9v on one app, and 9.5 on the other.

    Well, lots of threads on the internet indicate that you can't really trust these apps to give accurate voltage measurements. It's said that some mobos "report the voltages differently" and so the readings are off. I find that hard to believe, but OK it's possible, so I tested my Corsair HX-series psu with a multimeter, under load:

    12.25v, and steady as a rock.

    Regardless, since I don’t have an oscilliscope to test for ripple, I bought a new Seasonic Prime 750w psu last week and swapped it in. Afterwards, I got the SAME READINGS IN THE SOFTWARE, and I’m still getting occasional bluescreens & reboots.

    ### It’s important to note that the readings in Speedfan & CPUID are NOT JUST LOW, BUT MUCH LESS STABLE than the readings directly off the PSU. The software readings don’t fluctuate by much, but they DO fluctuate continuously. (with both psu’s.)

    And so:
    —————————————————————————

    MY QUESTIONS:


    1: Is it really true that some (expensive) mobos have an architecture that gives radically-false 12v readings to both Speed fan and CPUID? (I find this hard to believe. One would think the software would then have multiple settings, to compensate.)

    2: Is it true (as I’ve read) that some mobos take 12v into the vrm, and convert it? - Do they also pass some 12v through, for use with some hardware?

    3: Where exactly does CPUID, Speedfan, etc read the various voltages FROM?

    ## 4: Does the fact that the software voltage readings are fluctuating slightly indicated a problem?

    ### 5: The bottom line: Does it sound like this mobo should have it’s vrm circuit tested, or should I be looking elsewhere for my problem?


    6: Where can I find a VISUAL guide to testing the vrm’s output voltages?

    -------------------------------------------

    Thanks in advance !
    Last edited by Cableaddict; 11-25-2016, 12:05 PM.
  • kc8adu
    Super Moderator
    • Nov 2003
    • 8832
    • U.S.A!

    #2
    Re: Bad Mobo VRM - Symptoms?

    i would tear it down and wash the board and ram.simple green is good for this.
    pull battery and wash it in the sink.
    scrub with toothbrush and final rinse with alcohol.
    saved many laptop spill victims like this.
    after final rinse blow off with compressed air.
    preheat oven to 250f.
    and bake it dry about 1 hour.
    most vrm blow up grandly if the water hit it.
    ignore the voltages in the bios.measure directly with a good meter.
    measure at the row of caps along cpu.
    Last edited by kc8adu; 11-25-2016, 12:55 PM.

    Comment

    • eccerr0r
      Solder Sloth
      • Nov 2012
      • 8701
      • USA

      #3
      Re: Bad Mobo VRM - Symptoms?

      As hardware monitoring has always been a Linux issue, I suspect windows has the same issues. Usually the software that reads the voltages are getting raw data from the hardware monitoring chip, usually through i2c. However that's the problem - it's raw data. Sometimes it can be assumed that the data is correct as is without preprocessing as the reference design says it should be, but that only can be an assumption, and we know that assumptions can be the source of all fsckups. Board design will vary from manufacturer to manufacturer, model to model, and you can only trust whatever software the manufacturer supplies. Usually the reported BIOS voltages should be much more like what reality is.

      Really need the scope/external meter to be sure.

      Comment

      • RJARRRPCGP
        Badcaps Legend
        • Jul 2004
        • 6304
        • USA

        #4
        Re: Bad Mobo VRM - Symptoms?

        Those unrealistically low voltage readings are typical of HW Monitor and SpeedFan...
        ASRock B550 PG Velocita

        Ryzen 9 "Vermeer" 5900X

        32 GB G.Skill RipJaws V F4-3200C16D-32GVR

        Arc A770 16 GB

        eVGA Supernova G3 750W

        Western Digital Black SN850 1TB NVMe SSD

        Alienware AW3423DWF OLED




        "¡Me encanta "Me Encanta o Enlistarlo con Hilary Farr!" -Mí mismo

        "There's nothing more unattractive than a chick smoking a cigarette" -Topcat

        "Today's lesson in pissivity comes in the form of a ziplock baggie full of GPU extension brackets & hardware that for the last ~3 years have been on my bench, always in my way, getting moved around constantly....and yesterday I found myself in need of them....and the bastards are now nowhere to be found! Motherfracker!!" -Topcat

        "did I see a chair fly? I think I did! Time for popcorn!" -ratdude747

        Comment

        • ChaosLegionnaire
          HC Overclocker
          • Jul 2012
          • 3264
          • Singapore

          #5
          Re: Bad Mobo VRM - Symptoms?

          whoa... x99... top end mobo... here's a lesson: always take good care of your stuff esp. high-end stuff and never run electronics when wet. most likely the board suffered water damage which will be nigh on impossible to pinpoint exactly what shorted and failed.

          since u've had it for 2 years and mobos typically have 3 years warranty, just rma the mobo for a replacement. have u tested the cpu in another system as well? hope the cpu didnt suffer water/short-circuit damage also. its possible an adjacent pin with a higher voltage shorted another with a lower voltage. this can cause cpu damage.

          Comment

          Related Topics

          Collapse

          • ChaosLegionnaire
            what i went through dealing with my mobo with dead onboard sound!
            by ChaosLegionnaire
            so i took out one of my spare gigabyte ep35-ds3r mobos from storage for use to do some cpu, ram and video card testing of stuff i bought from ebay and got for free from momaka. he bought 50 e8400 cpus for cheap from ebay some years ago and i decided to help him relieve him of some of his supply since he had waaaay too many!! what did we say about hoarding too much stuff and depriving others of them?! *cough* socialism *cough* lol!

            i had to blow some dust off the board and heatsinks with the datavac as i didnt clean it up before putting it in storage. after finishing...
            09-13-2022, 09:02 AM
          • Cerberuska
            Mobo MSI B550-A PRO password popup
            by Cerberuska
            Hello guys,
            I have interesting problem. My MoBo MSI running on Ryzen 7 w/o graphics just good. I swapped to Ryzen 5 5600G and on the boot I stuck with screen on picture. Enter Password. I checked BIOS setting with Ryzen 7, no security is enabled, BIOS password or TPM.
            BIOS I updated to last one.
            any suggestions?
            And same thing for two different 5600G, and yes, MoBo supposed to support it.
            Thank you...
            11-10-2024, 01:23 PM
          • mrsith
            Dell G3 17 3779 - no display after mobo replacement
            by mrsith
            Hi guys,

            I have a friend's Dell 3779 that came to me with severely shorted mobo. Did not manage to isolate the cause, most likely that was a bga shorted. Went for a replacement motherboard. Got one from China, apparently it's been tested prior to shipping. The mobo starts up normally but I am getting no display whatsoever.

            Tried using external monitor, but being blind I am not sure if laptops goes as far as booting to Windows, a d without it I cannot get hdmi to work. Can't see boot menu options to make sure it boots to Windows. Went ahead and did a blind bios update,...
            04-30-2023, 05:11 AM
          • Ibod
            Corsair cx600 psu & ASRock B450Pro4 mobo wont start
            by Ibod
            HI I have a PC using a Corsair cx600 psu & ASRock B450 Pro4 mother board that won't power on after a shutdown (replaced a dead drive in a raid array) Not the boot drive.

            With most things unplugged, including the 24 pin ATX connector, but not the ATX12v to cpu, I have +5.01V on the +5vsb pin 9 from the PSU. When I plug the 24 pin back in to the mobo, the +5vsb fluctuates between 1.1v & 1.9v.

            Not sure where to go from here ?

            Is the PSU at fault or is the mobo causing the problem

            Look forward to any help :-)

            If I plug the 24...
            02-08-2023, 11:00 AM
          • Felipe_Serra_83
            Dell Inspiron 14-5448 - fan turns off and mobo keeps running
            by Felipe_Serra_83
            Hi, everyone. First post of an actual repair. I'm a technician but a complete newbie with laptops.

            So I got this Dell Inspiron to play with.

            No charger, so I connected to my bench PSU.

            The laptop also didn't include: hard disk (I added one of my own for testing, see below) and wireless PCB (but I doubt this could have anything to do with this particular failure).


            ------What it did (and didn't do)------

            1) I turned it on and it powered on. Powered down in 2 seconds by itself.

            2) Removed RAM, changed slot. Same...
            04-04-2024, 12:39 PM
          • Loading...
          • No more items.
          Working...