Hi
My PC intermittently goes into "Lights are on but nobody's home" mode.
That is I will be working away and all of a sudden the screen goes blank (monitor remains on but goes into 'no signal' mode), though the PC is still powered up in that the power LED is illuminated and all fans are still spinning.
The PC cannot be revived except by hitting the reset button or powering the machine down & back up.
There are no messages in the Event logs that hint at the problem and I also did a reinstall of XP (not for this reason) and it's still doing it.
It doesn't seem to happen as a result of doing anything specific and occurs maybe once a day on average (twice on Saturday over an 8 hour period).
One time it happened just after I started copying a load of files from one drive to another, and at the point it happened the drive activity light stopped flickering, which suggests that it's not a monitor fault and possibly not even a graphics card fault as you might expect the file
transfer to continue if this was the case.
Sounds like motherboard, RAM or CPU to me, but does this sound symptomatic of any particular one? Any ways to test without having to buy new components first?
Ian
My PC intermittently goes into "Lights are on but nobody's home" mode.
That is I will be working away and all of a sudden the screen goes blank (monitor remains on but goes into 'no signal' mode), though the PC is still powered up in that the power LED is illuminated and all fans are still spinning.
The PC cannot be revived except by hitting the reset button or powering the machine down & back up.
There are no messages in the Event logs that hint at the problem and I also did a reinstall of XP (not for this reason) and it's still doing it.
It doesn't seem to happen as a result of doing anything specific and occurs maybe once a day on average (twice on Saturday over an 8 hour period).
One time it happened just after I started copying a load of files from one drive to another, and at the point it happened the drive activity light stopped flickering, which suggests that it's not a monitor fault and possibly not even a graphics card fault as you might expect the file
transfer to continue if this was the case.
Sounds like motherboard, RAM or CPU to me, but does this sound symptomatic of any particular one? Any ways to test without having to buy new components first?
Ian