You were right, it was a good idea to try everything out. I found out at my friends that when I kept all of the same components and just switched my Graphics card for his, it wouldn't freeze anymore. I just got a the same Graphics card as he has tonight, and I'm going to try it out to see if that solves the problem. Thanks again.My personal opinion, it could be a bad CPU, but if it is, that is an extremely unlikely problem. It is quite rare that you get a bad CPU. A bad PSU, Motherboard or ram, yes, it happens quite frequently, but a bad CPU is extremely rare. Start up is an extremely stressful time for a computer. Remember, you are going from off, a complete stop, to full power on every component. That puts stress on every component and a bad or even weak component is going to show up and not work correctly. See if you or your friend can use a multi meter and keep tabs on the PSU, especiallt when under strain. See the values and how much fluctuation there is in it. Swap Graphics cards with your friend and see how his computer does with yours and how your computer does with his. Try a different hard drive, Disconnect all drives except for the new one. See whay happens. I rebuilt my whole computer once because I couldn't get it to post. All the time, it was a bad hard drive that wouldn't allow the computer to start. Try borrowing if possible all components of the computer and testing them one at a time until you find the one causing the problem. If you go through that and still have no resolution, your problem is the motherboard or, as your friend said, the CPU as that's all that's left.
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7FX 83208GB 1866MHZ DDR 3gtx 660
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Custom
- OS
- Windows 7
- CPU
- FX 8320
- Motherboard
- asus M5A97R2.0
- Memory
- 8GB 1866MHZ DDR 3
- Graphics Card(s)
- gtx 660
- Sound Card
- on board audio
- Hard Drives
- 1tb seagate baracuda
- PSU
- 750W evga Supernova
- Case
- NZXT phantom 410 crafted black
- Cooling
- OEM