Fixing a Viewer's BROKEN Gaming PC? - Fix or Flop S5:E4

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Greg Salazar

Greg Salazar

3 ай бұрын

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Welcome to Fix or Flop! We're up to Season 5, Episode 4. This viewer's gaming PC doesn't work! Can it be fixed? By the way, if you live in the Orlando, FL area and have an issue with your PC, apply to have it (possibly) fixed for free today! gregsalazar.com/fix-or-flop
Check out other Fix or Flop episodes in this playlist: • Fix or Flop
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#FixOrFlop

Пікірлер: 665
@ddmath
@ddmath 3 ай бұрын
The USB port probably took down the 5V rail I would suspect. When you bent the pins back and resolved the short you probably saved your own PSU.
@PileOfEmptyTapes
@PileOfEmptyTapes 3 ай бұрын
USB should never be able to pull that much without its OCP kicking in. I'd say it's just a coincidence, probably a bad cap in the power supply.
@AeiKei
@AeiKei 3 ай бұрын
@@PileOfEmptyTapes most mobos from that era don't have any sort of OCP built-in so most of the times the power supply will bite the dust in these situations
@StormsparkPegasus
@StormsparkPegasus 3 ай бұрын
I was just going to say that...USB uses 5V. Anyway...my conclusion is that computer was not taken care of anywhere near as well as the owner claimed it was.
@ddmath
@ddmath 3 ай бұрын
@@PileOfEmptyTapes Yup, it should never happen, but that never stops these things from happening.
@sgstudioofficial
@sgstudioofficial 3 ай бұрын
Nah, MBs even that old can operate with USB shorted. Some even will report a short into POST status sequence before proceeding to boot. Unless it is some kind of cheap aliexpress one.
@samgiroux
@samgiroux 3 ай бұрын
Huge props to you for keeping your errors in the video. Many people would have edited it and not switched the motherboard. This is why I love this series. Never change.
@joshholmes1372
@joshholmes1372 3 ай бұрын
Currently my favorite series in the tech/pc space.
@GregSalazar
@GregSalazar 3 ай бұрын
I appreciate that!
@TheRock14--14
@TheRock14--14 3 ай бұрын
Facts!
@altus8312
@altus8312 3 ай бұрын
Agreed!
@markschrama7218
@markschrama7218 3 ай бұрын
Favorite series and favorite episode so far! This one was so much fun to watch, fixing th old system while the new one didnt turn on was epic.
@aiash80
@aiash80 3 ай бұрын
Totally agree
@RadioDeadAir
@RadioDeadAir 3 ай бұрын
I'm willing to bet the busted USB port shorted the 5v rail on the PSU. Even removing the short, that motherboard was trashed and shouldn't have been trusted. Full replacement was the right call.
@manusoftar
@manusoftar 3 ай бұрын
Not necesarily, you could desolder the broken usb a female connector and solder a new one in there... then he could have opened the power supply to check what was wrong with it and actually try to fix it, like, replacing any cap that went bad...
@Masterninja2321
@Masterninja2321 3 ай бұрын
@@manusoftarthat if he had the supplies and I am pretty sure in another episode he said he don’t mess fixing power supply
@manusoftar
@manusoftar 3 ай бұрын
@@Masterninja2321 exactly, that's dumb... I know you should never mess with a power supply if you don't know what are you doing because you can get a shock, but if you know what you are doing is silly not to replace bad caps and fix what could be a pretty expensive thing for a few bucks that could be the price of the replacement caps.
@MisadventureMisty
@MisadventureMisty 3 ай бұрын
@michaelscarportI think I watched that same video of Greg’s. And, you’re correct- this series is designed to help people diagnose and fix issues. He has made multiple comments about not doing things that a user at home might try to do and could really mess things up or worse, get hurt. Such as opening, diagnosing and fixing a PSU.
@Xelbak_
@Xelbak_ Ай бұрын
@@manusoftar lol what? It is NOT dumb. What would be dumb is opening up a power supply and messing with the internals when you don't know what you're doing. Which is why he doesn't do that because he wouldn't know what he was doing and likely shock himself. I'd rather just replace the PSU outright then risk shocking myself and potentionally having to pay a hospital bill + the cost of a new PSU anyway.
@KRAVER_
@KRAVER_ 3 ай бұрын
LMAO that HDMI fan trick is neat 🤣😆🤣😆 I been working on PC's since 1995 and have fixed 1000's, and I never saw that. EVER.. LOL
@justSkitBra
@justSkitBra 3 ай бұрын
well even us old timers can learn something new, i still love learning new quirks here and there :)
@kenabi
@kenabi 3 ай бұрын
on the 4th gens, the digital display stuff goes directly to the cpu, and since the bent pents were in the area of some of those pins as well as the DMI pins, i'd guess it shorted some things and messed with the PCH's signals to kill off the pwm to the case fan headers. no matter how much we understand about computers, there's days when they're still completely black magic that follow their own arbitrary rules.
@michaelthompson9798
@michaelthompson9798 3 ай бұрын
69th 👍🥳🥳
@eyekona
@eyekona 3 ай бұрын
Really? If a board behaves in a strange way, it is almost ever a short somewhere. And most shorts are either rom sockets or from screws behind the mobo... So I suspected that from the beginning...
@kenabi
@kenabi 3 ай бұрын
@@JayPlaylists the 3rd gen cpus used something else (hdmi port to the chipset ->interface chips to get hdmi signal/timing), but the 4th gen basically hooked (not really, but basically) the hdmi port directly into the cpu socket. most of the digital video stuff that was in the chipset and external to it got onboarded in the 4th gen cpus. i have no idea when amd did their switchover, but it was probably around the same time. /shrug
@whiskeredgundam7765
@whiskeredgundam7765 3 ай бұрын
That look of defeat on your face when the new platform didn't post was heart breaking, but thankfully it was a simple oversight. Love your work, man.
@IsaacKhan_02
@IsaacKhan_02 3 ай бұрын
Ladies and gentlemen, The only man in history to fix a broken pc then break it and fix it again in the span of 10 minutes.
@ben.harnwell
@ben.harnwell 3 ай бұрын
You need to watch more Tronixfix. But then he does fix it really well
@DavidHolden15911855
@DavidHolden15911855 3 ай бұрын
Even though you found the bent pins on the CPU socket, it was probably a good call replacing the motherboard, as that USB socket, the bent pins on the CPU socket and those power anomalies, the board might not work for long
@DiggetyDank
@DiggetyDank 3 ай бұрын
it was enjoyable hearing "ow" every few seconds while sticking your hand inside the case lol thank you for that
@pusaduva
@pusaduva 3 ай бұрын
1050ti with that power supply feeling like that couch meme.
@brucepreston3927
@brucepreston3927 3 ай бұрын
Exactly! lol... I would probably sell the 1200w psu and use the money to buy a cheap 500w unit and a different GPU...I love that he puts comically over sized PSUs in these old machines though, it always gives me a chuckle...
@lanceripplinger8352
@lanceripplinger8352 3 ай бұрын
As a 20 year IT veteran, I always say you can never say you have seen everything. Some new problem will come and you have to solve it. Great job on this one and showing all the missteps along the way, because that is how you learn. 😊
@MarcoGPUtuber
@MarcoGPUtuber 3 ай бұрын
Watching a KZfaqr's not broken, actually awesome channel Season 5 Episode 4.
@juliuscheng5788
@juliuscheng5788 3 ай бұрын
Definite props for keeping the entire process on video. Could have edited everything to just fix the pins and call it a day. But the fact that you showed all the mistakes shows your integrity.
@theblower069
@theblower069 3 ай бұрын
Lesson learned check everything before moving forward with a repair. You never know what may be wrong. As always good video.
@prrocker9637
@prrocker9637 3 ай бұрын
Ngl as an older sibling I would 1000% end up swapping the higher capacity PSU into the main build and use that psu in this one lol the younger siblings always get the hand me downs 😂
@chucklos391
@chucklos391 3 ай бұрын
Haha that’s funny
@TheSpotify95
@TheSpotify95 3 ай бұрын
Yeah, a 1.2kW PSU would be going into the main build for sure, because that PSU would power a i9-14900K and 4090 setup without issues!
@WSS_the_OG
@WSS_the_OG 3 ай бұрын
Just to add on your opening "why bother" remarks, there's also a huge argument to be made for preventing these perfectly usable machines from achieving e-waste status any earlier than they need to. Great video Greg!
@misterthegeoff9767
@misterthegeoff9767 3 ай бұрын
In addition a rig like this can get a new person into the hobby and the more people we have using PCs like this instead of prebuilts or consoles the better
@AndyMitchellUK26
@AndyMitchellUK26 3 ай бұрын
I have a bunch of old office PCs in my garage, only dual core Sandy Bridge units. I don't get rid of them because every now and then I will see someone desperate for a basic PC for their family or just general office work. I recently gave one away to a family where the daughter had killed the family laptop by spilling a drink on it. They only needed it for MS Office and the children's homework so yeah, it's nice to avoid perfectly fine computers going to waste when there will always be someone out there that can use them.
@cjgeel1
@cjgeel1 Ай бұрын
My daily driver is an old i5 4690k in a z97 board. Runs smooth as silk but struggles with newer games
@newbnest
@newbnest 3 ай бұрын
16:31 that sigh... I felt it, I have this similar disappointment trying to build PCs for relatives and friends. But kudos to fixing it again this time. Anyways would having a checklist of checks be efficient in going through all the errors? A check list of fixes to go through from past fix or flop episodes
@ForzaE2
@ForzaE2 3 ай бұрын
This was a rollercoaster to watch.
@malem67
@malem67 3 ай бұрын
Been an electronics tech for 30 plus years built my first PC in the early 90s with and original 386. I have touched most everything in the x86 platform over the years and built numerous computers. I love your channel I really enjoy seeing your process and willingness to do what needs to be done to help people out. Keep up the great work and the channel.
@GregSalazar
@GregSalazar 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing, and thanks for the support!
@MikePacholik
@MikePacholik 3 ай бұрын
OMG! Greg my heart sank when you turned on the rig with all the new gear and no post. I am so happy it was just a cable. Really enjoy your videos. Keep it up.
@Nosi75
@Nosi75 3 ай бұрын
Never thought that this was cased by bend pins. Even as you rebend them, I thought that the USB port killed the board by shoring something. Really unexpected repair of the board. And again a great video. I like it very much that you never give up until you found the root cause and not just going the easy way by simply replacing anything that could potentially faulty. Thanks for that series and you being such a good teacher to us out here. Even with many years of experience in repairing PCs on my own, I can learn something from you. Very inspirering for me to watch.
@MyMusicMyMicMyLife
@MyMusicMyMicMyLife 3 ай бұрын
Great video Greg I have been watching for years, and just want to let you know that you sparked my interest in computer science and I have learned A LOT from your videos! so thank you! keep up the good work.
@GregSalazar
@GregSalazar 3 ай бұрын
Glad to hear it! Thanks for the support.
@QuiteLunacy
@QuiteLunacy 3 ай бұрын
The PSU upgrade costs more than the whole system😂
@mohamedasfour150
@mohamedasfour150 3 ай бұрын
well i accidentally saw one of your videos few days ago and never stopped watching since , thanks for the content and integrity
@dennissmith1435
@dennissmith1435 3 ай бұрын
Hard to tell without getting closer to the USB port issue. However, it looks like it’s an issue with the IO shield. When the motherboard was put in the IO shield prongs were bent out and interfering with the port itself. some one may have tried to plug in a USB device or cable and bent the prong into the port. Removing the motherboard and bending the prongs back would fix that.
@LetsGooo
@LetsGooo 3 ай бұрын
Logged in and see a new Greg upload? Gonna be a good day. Appreciate everything you do for these PC owners.
@GregSalazar
@GregSalazar 3 ай бұрын
Appreciate ya watching!
@GeoffBlake8620
@GeoffBlake8620 3 ай бұрын
Watching this series helped me troubleshoot my own pc when i was first building it and ive been obsessed every since. Nice job figuring this headache out Greg.
@JeffDeWitt
@JeffDeWitt 3 ай бұрын
The bit towards the end where it didn't work, I can SO relate. Finding what has to be the reason for a problem, fixing it, and then the thing still doesn't work is such a let down... and like you I've often found that yes, I did fix the problem, but then overlooked some stupid thing like a connector. Great episode!
@Edgemaster72
@Edgemaster72 3 ай бұрын
I recently helped a friend do a platform upgrade and definitely know your pain about self inflicted issues dragging out what seems like a simple process. Thanks for all you do for your local community and keeping it genuine with the repair process in these videos.
@matronedea
@matronedea 3 ай бұрын
I love this series and seeing all the mistakes. Watching them helped me troubleshoot my last few builds and I've been able to teach my brother to build his own PC, so your knowledge has been really beneficial for my family ❤️ thanks so much for posting these!
@alex16870
@alex16870 3 ай бұрын
That face expression is priceless at 16:47 , Sheeeeeshh
@khronotos5916
@khronotos5916 3 ай бұрын
Love your vids man, been watching since the start of this series and have applied some of the techniques you've used to mine and my families builds to fix issues I would have never even thought of. Keep up the great work man.
@tn_mateo5974
@tn_mateo5974 3 ай бұрын
I love this series!!! Given me the confidence to help friends diagnose problems with their rigs and have been successful in doing so. Thanks Greg. 😄
@jasongualdoni4809
@jasongualdoni4809 3 ай бұрын
Another great video. When, after putting your fingers inside the machine while powered on, then showed the giant explosion, that had me rolling! Glad it all worked out. Keep up the fascinating work. Love your channel!
@sarayx123
@sarayx123 3 ай бұрын
Love this series and love how earnest you are when it comes to these replacement parts and fixing the issue. I think a full MB replacement was the call here either way :). Hope to see you grow to 1 million this year man! Cheers from Amsterdam
@ralithorn3798
@ralithorn3798 3 ай бұрын
Great video Greg! I always learn a lot from these videos.
@John-iv6ih
@John-iv6ih 3 ай бұрын
Absolutely awesome 👌 I laughed so hard when he went to boot for the (last time) so funny, Greg! 😂 Great video, my friend! Keep going strong! Love the channel & playlist!
@FatCatFanatic
@FatCatFanatic 3 ай бұрын
Don't think you should feel too bad about upgrading the mainboard ... with that mangled USB socket I wouldn't have felt comfortable retunring it to the customer, even with the bent pins fixed and a new PSU. Job done well, IMHO. 👍🏻
@AtomicAJ74
@AtomicAJ74 3 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. It could go further south on its own, or the owner’s little brother might try to plug something in and wreck it completely.
@ThePuuFa
@ThePuuFa 2 ай бұрын
​@@AtomicAJ74Whenever I get to fix one like this I usually just pull/twist the tongues out from the broken USB socket to avoid it getting shorted again. Not everyone can afford a new motherboard and it will be 100% fine with one less USB port
@luisneves210
@luisneves210 3 ай бұрын
I have learned so much with your funny and very useful videos, thank you for all the amazing content ☺
@KrastyoKrastev
@KrastyoKrastev 3 ай бұрын
You are awesome Greg!!! Thanks for the good and entertaining video and for being so generous and just a lovely person!
@vincecooper2672
@vincecooper2672 3 ай бұрын
I've been building my own custom gaming configurations for over 40 years & I love this Channel. You can always learn more :)
@291blanco
@291blanco 3 ай бұрын
Greg, it is so refreshing to have someone with upstanding ethics like yourself. Also when a mistake is made you own it, for that I want to commend you. You my friend are a rare breed. Thank you for the great work you do, keep up the phenomenal work.
@bktebeau
@bktebeau 3 ай бұрын
Its great that you fix these PCs for people that are not able to do it or would likely get ripped off by another place. Good Job.
@GregSalazar
@GregSalazar 3 ай бұрын
It's because of all of you that we're able to do what we do. So thank you!
@awturbosp
@awturbosp 3 ай бұрын
I am a Mac and console guy. There is no reason why I should be so interested in this channel and series, but Greg makes it so interesting. This series has to be invaluable to PC people for troubleshooting their own rigs.
@verdedoodleduck
@verdedoodleduck 3 ай бұрын
For me there's a lot of schadenfreude. :o :)
@thefadebeta580
@thefadebeta580 3 ай бұрын
OMG Greg!, you are like the honest friend everyone deserves. You didn't need to replace the motherboard, however, you still did because you said you would on camera. EVEN THOUGH you could have easily edited the video and this still would have been a great episode. Greg, I commend your honesty!
@Olddanish
@Olddanish 3 ай бұрын
It's an honor you making these videos, and probably even helping your viewers with solutions to their own problems :)
@marcoachaves822
@marcoachaves822 3 ай бұрын
The only youtube channel about PCs that is worthy these days! Thx Greg
@bballwalli
@bballwalli 3 ай бұрын
This was a fun one. Keep it up man!
@groggyme
@groggyme 3 ай бұрын
Love this series. Glad to see it work!
@chucklos391
@chucklos391 3 ай бұрын
I was deathly afraid he was gonna replace the case. He did not! I love this case! What is it again?
@j00range4
@j00range4 3 ай бұрын
I'm so glad I got my mother's PC (hardware mostly from 2011) running and working last 2022 after sitting in a cabinet for I don't know how many years already. Just took a new PSU, an SSD, and some fans. I'm amazed by these tech lasting the test of time. Great work as always Greg and happy for the viewer's new hardware. 🎉
@BlackKnight813
@BlackKnight813 3 ай бұрын
Greg your a great person doing what you do to help these people out. Keep up the great work.
@TheKidd216
@TheKidd216 3 ай бұрын
Hello Greg, I’m a avid viewer of the fix or flip series and I just want to say thank you for the content cause it helped me build my first pc and it runs awesome from the things I’ve learned from you helping viewers like me. Keep up the great work and Thank You again.
@deniedrussian8506
@deniedrussian8506 3 ай бұрын
Love this series!!! Keep up the good work man!
@kiwieggcreations
@kiwieggcreations 3 ай бұрын
That 5v rail failing saved the rest of the parts from that short. You did your job power supply, rest in peace 🫡
@uatlagh
@uatlagh 3 ай бұрын
16:35 I related so much to that "oh no". That heart sinking feeling when something doesn't post when it should, sadly I am all too familiar with it.
@MichaelM-xt5kb
@MichaelM-xt5kb 3 ай бұрын
This has to be the most interesting episode, love these videos
@GiottoPrimo-pf4yn
@GiottoPrimo-pf4yn 3 ай бұрын
This series is so entertaining and educational
@cruise7625
@cruise7625 3 ай бұрын
I have felt your pain with the fan clipping your hand. Love your channel. it's helped me with my own issues and other people's pc's
@garrettwilde2798
@garrettwilde2798 3 ай бұрын
Love this series Greg!
@tech1m502
@tech1m502 3 ай бұрын
i get so happy when i see a new Fix or Flop episode
@johnbaillargeon7037
@johnbaillargeon7037 Ай бұрын
Love these videos u do great work for the masses. Keep on keeping on
@Miniputt_999
@Miniputt_999 3 ай бұрын
Nice fix, and some really good upgrades :) Looking forward to the next video :D
@greeshmaisave5410
@greeshmaisave5410 3 ай бұрын
This series should never end!😊
@salarmosavi9189
@salarmosavi9189 3 ай бұрын
YOU really are a nice guy. Giving away all these hardware to people and making alot of gamer kids happy , you doing god's work sir.
@robinnilsson7488
@robinnilsson7488 3 ай бұрын
i am addicted to this series. I need 5 videos a day, Thank you:=)
@nathan_tasker
@nathan_tasker 3 ай бұрын
Yet another top tier video, Greg. How you don’t have over 1 million subscribers yet continues to surprise me. Your content is always excellent, exciting and very informative. Keep up the great work my friend. I also can’t wait to see more new house content with your setting up the IT infrastructure as well.
@s.l.thompson1843
@s.l.thompson1843 3 ай бұрын
Nice one Greg. You helped make the little brother's birthday even more awesome!
@Yuriel1981
@Yuriel1981 3 ай бұрын
Good episode. And really an excellent lesson in troubleshooting. A very worthy video Greg. And we need more Raymond comments lol.
@NURMUHAMMEDKHAN
@NURMUHAMMEDKHAN 3 ай бұрын
I love it when there was new kind of problem greg found and I can learn something new😀
@leuviahjr
@leuviahjr 3 ай бұрын
I love how genuine and honest these types of series are getting, hopefully sometime I can adapt a fix or flop series here in ph with this caliber!!
@ryzen89
@ryzen89 3 ай бұрын
Greg's character is fantastic. You're a role model and a repair man.
@nerdgarage
@nerdgarage 3 ай бұрын
That "now what" look at 16:22 LOL
@steffenseelmann7784
@steffenseelmann7784 3 ай бұрын
Hallo Greg ich freue mich immer wieder über eine neue Folge von Fix or Flop! vielen Dank dafür 👍
@Kane2009
@Kane2009 3 ай бұрын
engaging episode as usual, thanks for making these!
@minntul7492
@minntul7492 3 ай бұрын
Been binge watching this entire playlist the past week. Very educational and fun to learn all the different methods of troubleshooting and understanding what exact component causes certain issues. Even helped me with issues I had with my new board and CPU (simple CMOS clear did the trick 😅)
@bmack6386
@bmack6386 3 ай бұрын
Another great episode. Thank you sir!
@demondice1505
@demondice1505 3 ай бұрын
Congrats Greg! Another great job and happy "customer".
@Th3_Jhobe
@Th3_Jhobe 3 ай бұрын
The best part of the video was the nuke. lol Ok it was pretty funny. Man sitting through these videos brings back many memories. I love watching these though to keep my own mind sharp and to live vicariously (and sometimes laugh at) Greg and his antics.
@MrKendemang
@MrKendemang 3 ай бұрын
What a fun video Greg :), Loved it!
@andrecorreia2822
@andrecorreia2822 3 ай бұрын
Hello! Love your videos, greetings from Portugal! Keep up the good work
@blahorgaslisk7763
@blahorgaslisk7763 3 ай бұрын
Having built and supported computers for almost 40 years I recognize your problems. I've seen, made or both just about every stupid thing you can do to a computer. The number of times a customer complained over a MB not working and discovering bent or broken pins in the CPU socket was way to common to be comfortable. And close to everyone claimed they had done nothing to the socket. *It was intersting that during this time I built far more than one thousand machines, and sure there were a few dead motherboards but I can't remember ever unpackaging a motherboard with the kind of damage our customers seemed to get. My standard diagnosis in a situation like this would be minimizing the equipment in the machine. That is disconnect all storage and all expansion cards including the GPU. If it still won't POST try another PSU with just the motherboard attached. It used to be that every motherboard had a onboard speaker or at least piezoelectric beeper. That can be critical when diagnosing a motherboard. Sure post code display digits are better, but we know how common those are. Un fortunately the beeping has been seen as "nasty" and people have either not attached the onboard speaker or the MB manufacturer didn't include one. So rip one of the speakers out of a old machine, solder some long leads and use it when the computer you're looking at doesn't have a speaker. do the same with a reset or power switch. It's way easier to attach a temporary power switch to the computer than juggling a screw driver. Make sure you have a very simple graphics card, one that doesn't need a power connector is enough. Use this to swap out any graphics card in the machine. If it works you know that the users GPU might be the problem. Swapping in a real simple GPU takes seconds, it's worth it. Try to keep a known good GPU at hand. Swapping the MB power can be a very quick way to eliminate the PSU as a problem. I used to have a Zippy EMACS 460W PSU to test with. This might sound too small, but I booted a 8 CPU server on it once. This server had four 1KW redundant PSU modules, so it was rated at about 3 KW standard, but my test PSU got me to the POST screen at least. This was an industrial grade PSU with just about no OCP protection. I blew components from some motherboards with it, but interestingly enough it seemed they tended to work after. This was most probably capacitators that capsized and shorted out. Blow enough amps at them and they would explode. This is not a repair or even a quick fix, but it demonstrates just what the problems are. If the machine still won't POST remove the motherboard from the computer and test it on the benchtop. This has depressingly often worked. Reasons has been loose screws under the MB, extra motherboard distances where there are no hole for the screws. A IT technician complained about the quality of our computers and required that we repaid them for all of them. Got him to send one in and found that he had removed the motherboard, removed the distances, screwed the motherboard directly to the case and now complained over the quality as the graphics card couldn't reach the socket reliably. This man had made sure the school bought all their computer equipment through his uncle. But these computers were bought when he was on vacation. He left the job short after this. Now one of the most embarrassing MB errors ever was actually when a multinational company was designing a new control computer for a power damm. They bought a very advanced motherboard that was only manufactured to order by the manufacturer. They had a 19" server chassis specially designed and manufactured one, just one of them. The first motherboard behaved strangely so we got the manufacturer to send a second. This did the same, and at the same time their old motherboard tested 100% in all tests I could think of. So we cot a third motherboard, jumped into a car and drove for six or seven hours until we could look at the machine in their shop. That server was strange. Swapped PSU, no difference. Unplugged all but one DRAM and it worked! tried to find the bad RAM but it behaved strangely. The tech swapped out the MB for our new one and it did the same things. Set up their old MB on the desk, installed the memory, CPU's and everything and it worked fine. Swapped that MB back into the server case and, no, it acted up again. Now I knew something was really strange with the chassis, so I unmounted the motherboard, put the screws on the table counted the screws, counted the screw holes and they were the same 13 screws for the motherboard. Large server boards are a bit special here. So I counted the motherrboard distances in the case, 14. This isn't right! Double checked every distance and found out that there was one extra, just under the memory slots on the motherboard. Turned out that when you installed the memory the memory bus on the motherboard could short out the against the distance. If you pulled on the memory modules it could work for a moment. Removing a module also tended to lighten the load allowing the machine to work. The distances were not screwed into the chassis but riveted in place. I borrowed a drill and drilled down that distance to the plate and it solved their problem. We looked at each other and decided that this was not what their boss needed to hear. So we invented some reason that sounded a little more advanced, but still made it look good without throwing their technician under the bus. Well they were a multinational company building hydroelectric power dams all over the world, and the motherboard were pretty expensive at over two thousand dollar each to us. Some percent more to the customer.
@Eternalduoae
@Eternalduoae 3 ай бұрын
Excellent video! I learned something new today. ALWAYS poke around with your fingers inside of a fully functional and powered on system! 😅
@ZachYoungBlood
@ZachYoungBlood 3 ай бұрын
love the series, every ep is an insta watch
@malccy72
@malccy72 3 ай бұрын
The world could definitely do with a few more Greg Salazars. Really enjoy all your videos Greg, all best to you.
@RagingROKY
@RagingROKY 3 ай бұрын
Been watching since season 1 when i built my first PC. Seeing all of the issues that can happen inside of said PCs helped me build mine with no issues. Thank you Greg!
@hattershouse710
@hattershouse710 3 ай бұрын
Learned so much from watching this series. Thankfully I've never had to diagnose my rig, yet.
@GamerDave1974
@GamerDave1974 3 ай бұрын
TBH Greg...all of us system builders/rapairers have been through our glitches and garbage and that's how we learn. I have been building and repairing PC's since 2002 and over the years have learned a great deal. It's always a learning curve man with how PC tech is moving along. I Love IT!!
@nextcornerman
@nextcornerman 3 ай бұрын
This is definitely my favorite series on KZfaq right now, no matter what I do, whenever I see that FoF thumbnail I immediately stop and watch it. Great episode once again Greg!
@derekisaac8429
@derekisaac8429 3 ай бұрын
I am the world’s worst for seeing one problem and missing others! Very good learning experience for all us PC builders and repair techs! Always appreciate you Greg!
@jd31068
@jd31068 3 ай бұрын
Good on you Greg, for sticking with the replacement. That MB and PSU were living on borrowed time as it is.
@pete1200s
@pete1200s 3 ай бұрын
Greg you always do a good Honest john job. Fails, cock ups & of course , most important WINS. Love the work you do. You are so good at what you do. Always watching , al the best.
@Forlong21
@Forlong21 3 ай бұрын
Love the ability to fix/upgrade/reuse old equipment and it also is a troubleshooting help guide.
@1Mrstephen
@1Mrstephen 3 ай бұрын
Have to praise you for continuing with the upgrade. I think that was actually super cool of you and something most wouldn’t do now a days. GG Greg. Respect.
@Sinsfromhellv1
@Sinsfromhellv1 3 ай бұрын
13:48 was so funny to me! Love your videos Greg!
@BillHutchison77
@BillHutchison77 3 ай бұрын
Love these videos Greg, would love to do something similar here in South Australia.
@0o9ijnbhytgr
@0o9ijnbhytgr 3 ай бұрын
easy to watch and learing everytime so keep them coming :)
@asjunk2
@asjunk2 3 ай бұрын
Always good to see someone make mistakes and own up to them -- that's how we learn. Thanks for the great content Greg.
@GregSalazar
@GregSalazar 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@horizonrider508
@horizonrider508 3 ай бұрын
most enjoyable series of flip or flop greg.
@johncundiff7075
@johncundiff7075 3 ай бұрын
Awesome.. i do this all the time here in Texas.. I call it error and trial!!! Keep up the awesome work!!!
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