PC Random Restart

stwxs

New Member
PC randomly restart frequently.
I have the HWINFO .DBG file as attached.
If you are kind to assist to check what is the issue ?

As the uploaded file is too large for the server to process, im not sure if it's uploaded
But if it's not uploaded https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Zv3ULdaO5Ks3XKBKVP1mV5g2pTy_v68t/view?usp=sharing is the .DBG file
Searched the forum to zip the file first before uploading , thus reuploading
 

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Is this caused by HWiNFO, or just HWiNFO used to diagnose a system problem?
This is used to diagnose a system problem.
Would definitely appreciate your assistant on this

Am i doing this wrong? or am i suppose to provide the log file?
 
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It is possible that the root cause of the problem in the power supply: either it does not hold the voltage on the outputs of the channels under load, which can be caused by both a refusal and overloading on the current.

But, in any case, before checking the programs, it is worthwhile to measure the voltages under load with a voltmeter (multimeter) capable of measuring voltages up to 20V with an error (error) no worse than 1%. And these requirements are met by almost any modern multimeter.

What are we doing? We measure the voltages on the power connectors - boards and disks under load and look at whether they go outside the permissible scatter: for voltages of 3.3V and 5V - 5% or 0.15V and 0.25V, and for 12V 10%, that is, 1.2V. But it is better if the deviations are slightly less to reduce the influence of the input voltage jumps and aging of the power supply itself.

If the voltage goes beyond these limits, then we need a more powerful or obviously working PSU. Well, this can be checked, for example, such a device (it eats from the test BP) - Power Supplay Tester and if it shows that the block is faulty, change and with a probability of 0.99 the problem will leave.

And if the PSU is in order (according to devices, and not in words), it is also worth wiping with ethyl or isopropyl alcohol contacts of memory modules and expansion boards, and if this does not help, you can look for a programmatic cause of failures because the electronics is the science of contacts and in 95% of malfunctions are to blame.
 

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  • PSU_tester.jpg
    PSU_tester.jpg
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