
- #I7 phone master reboot cracked
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#I7 phone master reboot windows
This is the most thorough reset (or recovery/reinstall/refresh) option as it replaces the current Windows configuration with a new one.
#I7 phone master reboot Pc
Strange thing is now I can't even get to a post screen, the M/b literally shuts itself down within a second of power on (the lights and fans just have enough time to flicker on or spin), then it shuts down for 3-4 seconds, then tries again, in an endless loop.īecause it started off with this weird USB over-current error, I'm thinking its a MB failure of some sort.the PSU seems fine, as in it's giving juice to the MB when it requests it, so I don't think that's at fault.How to reset the PC and remove all of my personal files, apps and settings I can't see anything burned, and there was no nasty smell of any description. *I hadn't added any USB devices than were already connected for just short of a year.and that is only Keyboard, Mouse and the occasional USB stick or external device which is powered by its own power source. Visual inspection of the USB ports and board headers doesn't show up any bad connections or bad pins, and the weird thing is the computer shutdown with this fault whilst running normally, I hadn't recently plugged in or disconnected any new USB devices that would draw too much current or damage the ports physically. Yeh I've tried numerous reboots with absolutely 0 USB devices connected, all header connections removed from M/B etc. (RMA is probably the better option, if it proves necessary, since the mobo is still under 3-year warranty.)
#I7 phone master reboot full
Aside from a full mobo RMA or physically desoldering/removing the defective USB port(s). If you're using a Corsair AX-i PSU then it might be best to keep the CorsairLink USB-to-PSU disconnected until you've resolved this mysterious USB issue.
#I7 phone master reboot cracked
Inspect all the USB ports themselves, ensure they're properly affixed onto the PCB with clean solder points, no adjacent components (especially caps and diodes) look "burnt" or damaged or smell funny when the system is powered up, nothing seems loose or wiggly or electrically problematic, no cracked traces, etc. look for anything which might produce an electrical short, maybe blow them out with compressed air or even use an electrical contact cleaner. Inspect all your USB port pins, there might be bent, broken, or missing pins, there might be debris or residue. Try a couple boot cycles with absolutely no USB devices connected - not even keyboard, mouse, NZXT hub, PSU - just to see if the mobo will post (as far as "keyboard not detected" error, anyways) and perhaps self-toggle some internal flag back to working state. Or by plugging in a non-enumerated USB "decoration" which sucked more power than it should have. I'm guessing this fault was triggered by too many USB devices serviced off one USB controller/port. It' less than 1 year old and not much use.* Now the board simply fires up (all lights come on briefly, fans spin), then it has a power-out failure, complete shutdown, then tries to turn on again, shutsdown within 2 seconds.does this in an infinite loop until I kill the PSU power.Īny ideas at all? It seems like maybe a failure of the motherboard to me, but I'm no expert. Since then, things seem to have deteriorated more. BIOS updated but still the same fault message. I tried flashing the latest BIOS from a USB stick in the BIOS port, this worked OK. However, I still got the same message - USB Over-current detected.

So basically no USB devices at all connected. I disconnected every USB device connected (externally USB keyboard and mouse (both ROG) and internally the NZXT USB Hub with the PSU USB connection and my AIO cooler usb connection attached and the front USB panel connector. The system would shut itself down, and if I tried to turn on again, I would simply get the same message. Of course, as always, my keyboard was plugged in as usual. This time the PC booted, but only got as far as the opening BIOS "American mega trends" screen, with an error message "keyboard not detected" and "USB Device Over-Current Detected.

So I flicked off the PSU master-switch and back on again. I tried to turn on the computer using case power button, nothing happened. At some point whilst I was out of the room, it seems the system turned itself off (not sleep mode or anything like that). I left my PC on for a few hours on Saturday (Maximus IX Formula with i7-7700k).
