Results 1 to 10 of 78
-
10-15-2016 11:26 AM #1
mulderfox PC Specs Laptop (Model) MSI GP62MVR 7RF Motherboard Asus X99-A II Processor Intel i7-6850k Memory (part number) BLS2K8G4D240FSE Graphics Card #1 MSI GTX1080Ti Monitor Dell 27" S2716DG Storage #1 Samsung EVO 850 500GB SSD Storage #2 HGST 10TB HDD, Toshiba 5TB HDD CPU Cooler Noctua D14 Case Phanteks P300 Power Supply Thermaltake Smart DPS 750W Keyboard CoolerMaster Masterkeys M Pro White Mouse Logitech G502 Headset/Speakers Thonet and Vander GRUB 2.1 Speakers OS Windows 10 Pro 64 Bit
- Join Date
- Aug 2016
- Reputation
- 10
- Posts
- 49
[Strix x99 Gaming] QCODE 00 over night after several small issues
Hi!
I had my new build die on me over night.
I left my PC on for the night, and when I got up I found that it seemed to have been turned off.
Only it wasn't. When I turned it back on, all I got was a momentary power and then shut off.
After another attempt or two, the board would get power and the components too, but there would be no post, and no boot.
All the while, the QCODE alpha-numeric display would only show the numbers 00.
I've searched and found that this issue has happened to others with the same board and other x99 asus boards and may mean faulty board or faulty CPU
- due to a power surge.
I've already replaced the board today, but sadly the issue is still there.
The only change is that there is no more momentary power, but the power starts and stays, but all the rest is the same.
I've concluded that the CPU was fried, and started an RMA process with Intel.
The CPU is a brand new i7-6850k and all the other parts (aside from a couple of mechanical hard drives) were bought at the same time about two and half months ago.
This is an unacceptable issue with a top-of-the-line board from ASUS - especially after two months of use - and especially as it happens in more than one x99 motherboard model.
I am certain the blame is with the board, as I had other small issues with it before:
1. long post time (the time it takes between pressing the power button and till you hear the beep and see anything on the screen)
2. no network connection from within the bios meaning I could not perform a bios update from there.
On previous builds I had, my PC would stay on for months at a time, and in this one the cooling is much better so there is no reason for anything like that to happen,
not to mention that's what thermal (and electrical) protection is there for. power fluctuation is not expected or accepted phenomenon with a high grade gaming motherboard.
Has anyone else encounter this issue? My PSU is also brand new with 750W of power that are more than enough to drive my system, even with the GTX1080 Graphicds card I have
installed.
I am quite worried that replacing the CPU might not help even with the replaced motherboard.. what would I do then?
-
10-15-2016 12:23 PM #2
- Join Date
- Oct 2012
- Reputation
- 339
- Posts
- 15,247
-
10-15-2016 12:33 PM #3
Nate152 PC Specs Motherboard ROG Strix Z690-F Gaming WiFi Processor i7-12700KF Memory (part number) Kingston Fury Beast 16GB (2x8GB) 6000MT/s (KF560C40BBK2-16) Graphics Card #1 ROG Strix 3090 Ti LC OC Sound Card ROG SupremeFX Monitor HP ZR30w Storage #1 Seagate Firecuda 530 1TB CPU Cooler EK Quantum Velocity2 Case Thermaltake Tower 900 Power Supply EVGA Supernova 1600 T2 Keyboard ROG Falchion NX / Strix Flare II/Azoth Mouse ROG Chakram X/Chakram Core/Spatha X/Harpe Ace Headset ROG Delta S Animate Mouse Pad Steelseries Prism XL / ROG Scabbard II/Hone Ace OS Windows 11 Home Accessory #1 2x Swiftech Maelstrom X300 D5 V2 Accessory #2 2x Hardware Labs SR2 560 MP radiators Accessory #3 Lamptron FC-5 V3 fan controller
- Join Date
- Feb 2013
- Reputation
- 408
- Posts
- 17,903
Hi Mulderfox
Welcome to the ROG forum.
You're on the right track in what components to suspect, mobo, cpu and as Chino suggests the psu.
It's likely a bad/blown cpu since it's the same with a new motherboard, I'm curious of the brand of your psu too.
I'm pretty sure your motherboard has anti-surge protection, with your new one check it's on/enabled.
-
10-18-2016 01:15 AM #4
mulderfox PC Specs Laptop (Model) MSI GP62MVR 7RF Motherboard Asus X99-A II Processor Intel i7-6850k Memory (part number) BLS2K8G4D240FSE Graphics Card #1 MSI GTX1080Ti Monitor Dell 27" S2716DG Storage #1 Samsung EVO 850 500GB SSD Storage #2 HGST 10TB HDD, Toshiba 5TB HDD CPU Cooler Noctua D14 Case Phanteks P300 Power Supply Thermaltake Smart DPS 750W Keyboard CoolerMaster Masterkeys M Pro White Mouse Logitech G502 Headset/Speakers Thonet and Vander GRUB 2.1 Speakers OS Windows 10 Pro 64 Bit
- Join Date
- Aug 2016
- Reputation
- 10
- Posts
- 49
PSU: Thermaltake Smart DPS G 750W
I really hope it's not the Power supply, as it is brand new, and also because I do seem to get power just fine.
Now that my CPU is out, is it still supposed to show 00 q-code when I turn the PC on? because it does.
Also, anti-surge is enabled by default, and in any case, I can only check that from within the BIOS which is not accessible right now..
thanks
-
10-18-2016 03:21 AM #5
Nate152 PC Specs Motherboard ROG Strix Z690-F Gaming WiFi Processor i7-12700KF Memory (part number) Kingston Fury Beast 16GB (2x8GB) 6000MT/s (KF560C40BBK2-16) Graphics Card #1 ROG Strix 3090 Ti LC OC Sound Card ROG SupremeFX Monitor HP ZR30w Storage #1 Seagate Firecuda 530 1TB CPU Cooler EK Quantum Velocity2 Case Thermaltake Tower 900 Power Supply EVGA Supernova 1600 T2 Keyboard ROG Falchion NX / Strix Flare II/Azoth Mouse ROG Chakram X/Chakram Core/Spatha X/Harpe Ace Headset ROG Delta S Animate Mouse Pad Steelseries Prism XL / ROG Scabbard II/Hone Ace OS Windows 11 Home Accessory #1 2x Swiftech Maelstrom X300 D5 V2 Accessory #2 2x Hardware Labs SR2 560 MP radiators Accessory #3 Lamptron FC-5 V3 fan controller
- Join Date
- Feb 2013
- Reputation
- 408
- Posts
- 17,903
Yeah it will show code 00 with no cpu installed, I'd be a little leery of your psu frying your cpu. Chino recommends Seasonic, I recommend evga supernova and both are high quality psu brands.
How long was it working before the cpu died and were you overclocking it?
-
10-18-2016 03:48 AM #6
mulderfox PC Specs Laptop (Model) MSI GP62MVR 7RF Motherboard Asus X99-A II Processor Intel i7-6850k Memory (part number) BLS2K8G4D240FSE Graphics Card #1 MSI GTX1080Ti Monitor Dell 27" S2716DG Storage #1 Samsung EVO 850 500GB SSD Storage #2 HGST 10TB HDD, Toshiba 5TB HDD CPU Cooler Noctua D14 Case Phanteks P300 Power Supply Thermaltake Smart DPS 750W Keyboard CoolerMaster Masterkeys M Pro White Mouse Logitech G502 Headset/Speakers Thonet and Vander GRUB 2.1 Speakers OS Windows 10 Pro 64 Bit
- Join Date
- Aug 2016
- Reputation
- 10
- Posts
- 49
-
10-18-2016 04:25 AM #7
Nate152 PC Specs Motherboard ROG Strix Z690-F Gaming WiFi Processor i7-12700KF Memory (part number) Kingston Fury Beast 16GB (2x8GB) 6000MT/s (KF560C40BBK2-16) Graphics Card #1 ROG Strix 3090 Ti LC OC Sound Card ROG SupremeFX Monitor HP ZR30w Storage #1 Seagate Firecuda 530 1TB CPU Cooler EK Quantum Velocity2 Case Thermaltake Tower 900 Power Supply EVGA Supernova 1600 T2 Keyboard ROG Falchion NX / Strix Flare II/Azoth Mouse ROG Chakram X/Chakram Core/Spatha X/Harpe Ace Headset ROG Delta S Animate Mouse Pad Steelseries Prism XL / ROG Scabbard II/Hone Ace OS Windows 11 Home Accessory #1 2x Swiftech Maelstrom X300 D5 V2 Accessory #2 2x Hardware Labs SR2 560 MP radiators Accessory #3 Lamptron FC-5 V3 fan controller
- Join Date
- Feb 2013
- Reputation
- 408
- Posts
- 17,903
I've seen a few people reporting this with the rampage v extreme but it was rare, I haven't heard anyone reporting this with the Strix x99 gaming this is why I said I'd be leery of your psu.
Normally when you go over the maximum safe voltage the bios will give you a cpu over current warning and you'd have to lower the voltage or reset to defaults. I suppose it's possible it could have been the motherboard allowing the over current but since you got a new one it shouldn't happen again.
To be sure you could get a high quality psu (supernova or seasonic) and use the thermaltake as a spare, the only thermaltake psu's I would trust are the thermaltake toughpower's.
Let us know how it goes with the new cpu.Last edited by Nate152; 10-18-2016 at 04:29 AM.
-
10-21-2016 03:06 AM #8
mulderfox PC Specs Laptop (Model) MSI GP62MVR 7RF Motherboard Asus X99-A II Processor Intel i7-6850k Memory (part number) BLS2K8G4D240FSE Graphics Card #1 MSI GTX1080Ti Monitor Dell 27" S2716DG Storage #1 Samsung EVO 850 500GB SSD Storage #2 HGST 10TB HDD, Toshiba 5TB HDD CPU Cooler Noctua D14 Case Phanteks P300 Power Supply Thermaltake Smart DPS 750W Keyboard CoolerMaster Masterkeys M Pro White Mouse Logitech G502 Headset/Speakers Thonet and Vander GRUB 2.1 Speakers OS Windows 10 Pro 64 Bit
- Join Date
- Aug 2016
- Reputation
- 10
- Posts
- 49
Well, my Power supply is by Thermaltake, and I did some research before buying it. It is a good power supply. from what I read on this forum as well as others, it is more likely that the VRM circuits on the motherboard failed and allowed for a fatally high voltage to be pushed to the CPU.. thus it is not due to a faulty PSU but a faulty motherboard or motherboard design (as it's reported to have happened in several different x99 Asus motherboards).
I have contacted Thermaltake and since the PSU is still working, there are no sounds nor any sign that it is not doing its job, it all points at the motherboard.
However, to be on the safe side and as I am living in a stormy part of the world (plenty of lightning storms) - I have ordered a backup UPS to make sure my system will not be affected by any power surges.
Thanks for your feedback, and I'll keep you updated (still waiting for my RMA'd CPU).
-
10-21-2016 03:40 AM #9
Nate152 PC Specs Motherboard ROG Strix Z690-F Gaming WiFi Processor i7-12700KF Memory (part number) Kingston Fury Beast 16GB (2x8GB) 6000MT/s (KF560C40BBK2-16) Graphics Card #1 ROG Strix 3090 Ti LC OC Sound Card ROG SupremeFX Monitor HP ZR30w Storage #1 Seagate Firecuda 530 1TB CPU Cooler EK Quantum Velocity2 Case Thermaltake Tower 900 Power Supply EVGA Supernova 1600 T2 Keyboard ROG Falchion NX / Strix Flare II/Azoth Mouse ROG Chakram X/Chakram Core/Spatha X/Harpe Ace Headset ROG Delta S Animate Mouse Pad Steelseries Prism XL / ROG Scabbard II/Hone Ace OS Windows 11 Home Accessory #1 2x Swiftech Maelstrom X300 D5 V2 Accessory #2 2x Hardware Labs SR2 560 MP radiators Accessory #3 Lamptron FC-5 V3 fan controller
- Join Date
- Feb 2013
- Reputation
- 408
- Posts
- 17,903
All right, sounds good.
Give us an update when you get your new cpu.
-
10-28-2016 01:12 AM #10
mulderfox PC Specs Laptop (Model) MSI GP62MVR 7RF Motherboard Asus X99-A II Processor Intel i7-6850k Memory (part number) BLS2K8G4D240FSE Graphics Card #1 MSI GTX1080Ti Monitor Dell 27" S2716DG Storage #1 Samsung EVO 850 500GB SSD Storage #2 HGST 10TB HDD, Toshiba 5TB HDD CPU Cooler Noctua D14 Case Phanteks P300 Power Supply Thermaltake Smart DPS 750W Keyboard CoolerMaster Masterkeys M Pro White Mouse Logitech G502 Headset/Speakers Thonet and Vander GRUB 2.1 Speakers OS Windows 10 Pro 64 Bit
- Join Date
- Aug 2016
- Reputation
- 10
- Posts
- 49
Meantime conclusion
Hi!
So you've asked for an update and here is one:
a couple of days ago, I've received my replacement CPU and installed it in my replacement motherboard.
As I updated the motherboard bios using a thumb drive even while there was no CPU there, it posted and initiated the bios update immediately.
Once the bios update was complete, I gone into the bios menu and made sure all the settings are correct. I did not optimize the bios settings (using the wizard) like I did the last time - for now, as it constitutes as a minor OC I think.
So in conclusion: CPU was fried and replaced, Asus x99 Strix Gaming motherboard suspected as the cause due to faulty VRM circuits and replaced.
Currently all seems good, and I really hope it stays this way.
Thank you for the comments!