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Spazegamer

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  1. I have an Asus Vivobook S that I received as a Christmas present, and after putting it inside of and taking it out of my backpack's laptop pouch, it started getting dirt/scuff marks that don't come off when I rub them with saliva or alcohol. I was wondering if anyone else has this problem or knows a fix. Or if they can tell if it's just pain chipping off. If you could suggest a way to cover it up that would be great. Thanks
  2. Yes, I'm pretty sure the sound is directly linked to the fan. I'm not sure if it's coming exactly from the fan since as far as I know fans don't have speakers.
  3. The noise is only there when they aren't moving. Once the fan starts moving the noise stops immediately.
  4. Hey everyone, so I have a problem with my computer's case fans. Upon startup, they emit a high pitched whining noise for about 20 seconds, before eventually starting up and performing normally. System Specs: CPU: Intel - Core i7-4790K 4.0GHz Quad-Core Processor GPU: GTX 1070 Strix 6GB RAM: G.Skill - Ripjaws X Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR3-1600 Memory Motherboard: Asus - Z97-A ATX LGA1150 Motherboard PSU: SeaSonic - 650W 80+ Gold Certified Semi-Modular ATX Power Supply (Original PSU) OS: Microsoft - Windows 10 Home OEM 64-bit The fans with the problem are the 2 fans that came with my case (NZXT S340) and they are the NZXT FN V2 fan model (120mm) I just replaced the power supply, so I doubt that's the problem, does anyone know what's up?
  5. Problem solved, here's what happened. So I went through the process of trying out each part individually. 2nd ram stick worked, GPU worked, then I got to the drives. I connected the power and sata cable to the boot drive SSD, and the PC refused to turn on. I was dismayed by the thought of it being the boot drive, since that would mean re-installing a lot of stuff. So I skipped that one and tried the 2nd SSD, and the PC still wouldn't boot up. I was relieved that it wasn't the drives. It was the cable that gave power to the drives. I assume the cable eventually degraded from being crammed up in my mess of terrible cable management. Luckily I had another SATA power cable laying around and I hooked it up to all my drives and it powered up and is working great right now! With some more cable ties I hope this doesn't happen again. Thank you for pointing me in the right direction
  6. Okay, interesting results. I removed power from all the drives, disconnected them from the motherboard, removed the GPU completely, and 1 stick of RAM was removed. The PC went to BIOS and actually started up. So from here I assume I just add parts 1 by 1 until it stops working. Thank you so much for your help so far. I'm so glad it's not the mobo or CPU.
  7. And this will work if I leave it connected to the case with the case power button hookups left in the board? Also, if this results in nothing happening, it means the board is dead right?
  8. Nothing. I tried every possible arrangement of sticks(I only have 2) in each of the RAM slots, together, and by themselves. I don't have any other RAM to test, so it might be a fault with RAM still.
  9. System Specs: CPU: Intel - Core i7-4790K 4.0GHz Quad-Core Processor GPU: GTX 1070 Strix 6GB RAM: G.Skill - Ripjaws X Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR3-1600 Memory Motherboard: Asus - Z97-A ATX LGA1150 Motherboard PSU: SeaSonic - 650W 80+ Gold Certified Semi-Modular ATX Power Supply (Original PSU) OS: Microsoft - Windows 10 Home OEM 64-bit So I have a strange problem here, my PC won't turn on even though there are lights on the motherboard and GPU that would be there if it was normally working. I opened it up, and literally all I did was switch the RAM sticks and then the PC booted up normally and worked perfectly fine, until I turned it off again, when the problem continued. At first I thought the PSU was dead, but the next day it booted up fine when I hit the power button, and worked again when I turned it off. Normal function resumed for about 2 days until last night, when the problem happened again; I didn't mess with the internals of the computer at all during that 2 day period. It didn't fix itself like last time (or it hasn't yet). To find out if it was the PSU, I took another PSU that I knew worked from another computer and installed it into mine, and the problem persists(same wattage on the new one). I tried switching the RAM again. Nothing (except those LEDs on the mobo and GPU which are still there.) So, does anybody have any idea what could be wrong? It is a 3 year old PC so maybe it just croaked? I have no clue at this point.
  10. Yeah same here, I can't make the fan go anything below 60% with the BIOS control. Does anyone know how to download ASUS AI Suite 3?
  11. I installed speedfan and tried to follow JayZ's guide but there is no "software controlled" option, just "DO NOT USE" Anyone know what's wrong?
  12. What is the best option for a fan controlling software so my PC isn't so noisy at night when I'm not playing games? (Windows 10 64 Bit) My fans are Noctua NF-P14s redux-1200 64.9 CFM 140mm Fan and my motherboard is the Asus Z97-A ATX LGA1150 Motherboard Thanks!
  13. That's disappointing...my GTX 970 Windforce had a Blue LED.
  14. Just finished putting together a PC, and installing all the new windows updates, and the latest driver from GeForce, but my GPU's LED isn't on at all. When I open the the GIGABYTE software, there is no LED option, but everything else is there. Here is my build: http://pcpartpicker.com/list/VCVWcc Any help/advice? Feel free to ask me for any information I may have left out.
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