bucksavage wrote on 12.05.10 at 02:29:20:Tim wrote on 11.05.10 at 09:18:15:I'm positive that's a power supply unit problem.
Hmm, that's what makes me wonder because the PSU must get power and transfer it if the fan attached to it runs, wouldn't it? The odd thing is that this never happens at all under normal situations.
I think it's either your AC current supply from the mains socket or powerstrip that's dodgy after the power outage, or your PSU must have gotten a bump after a blackout/brownout. What I would do in your situation is get a cheap multimeter and test the powersupply 3.3, 5 and 12v+ rails to see exactly if the power is stable.
Do this when you get the weird power issue.
To easily do this unplug every wire from mainbord, VGA, HD, drives, and only leave a few fans attached.
Switch off PSU by rocker switch on back of PSU.
Jumper the green pin and any black pin on the ATX power connector with a piece of wire. I use a paperclip.
Then power up the PSU. The fans should turn on. Now insert your red probe into a yellow or red wire on any molex (12 or 5v), and your black probe in a black wire, do this in this order, do the reverse of this when you take em out. Check to see if they deliver stable voltages, they shouldn't fluctuate and should be around the 12 or 5v mark.
Do the same for the brown wire on the ATX plug (3.3v)
If all this checks out allright, plug everything back in. And now when PC is fired up do the same thing. Also check under heavy load scenarious such as Furmark/3DMark to see if the rails are still stable.
If they are stable, it could well be your motherboard. Sometimes if your mains supply is unstable due to situations beyond your control ie. powerboard/grid defects, they can do damage to your electronics.
If your powergrid is dodgy, it's best to get a powerstrip that filters your powersupply, or even better a USP, uninterrupted power supply, basically a big battery that which lets you save your work in the even of a powerout and lets you safely power down.
Hope that helps.