UPDATE :
@Crunchy Dragon , @Energycore
New PSU arrived today. Under GPU load (AIDA shows max 115W) it is the same noise. (In idle there is a barely noticeable beep, but I can leave with that)
Anyone has a good suggestion what this could be?
I'm hijacking my old thread instead opening a new one since it is related with the original one (see op).
@Crunchy Dragon , @Energycore
So while I'm waiting for my new PSU to arrive one of my collage lend me his "old" PSU so I can keep working. It is a Gigabyte ODIN PRO 850W.
After changing the PSU and successfully fry my SSD an HDD caused because of my laziness. The computer was working fine for 3-4 days.
But today when I started to work and I started rendering the PSU started to make the same exact noise as the one before. The idle noise is fine at the moment.
I have tried different wall plugs from different fuse.
Anyone has a good suggestion what this could be?
Is there anything shows up in WinKey -> type : EventViewer -> WindowsLogs -> System as Critical or Error type (preferably with timestamp when freeze happens)
or in WinKey -> type : View Reliability History
That is a nice looking case.
Not necessarily required on the motherboard. You can use Molex or Sata to 3pin fan header eg.: https://www.amazon.com/Phobya-4-Pin-Molex-Connector-Connection/dp/B004CLDSRU (this was the first google result) . The downside is you can't control the Fan speed.
or
Use a Fan Controller eg: https://www.newegg.com/global/hu/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811981005
How about an Asus - STRIX B350-F GAMING https://pcpartpicker.com/product/ZHyxFT/asus-strix-b350-f-gaming-atx-am4-motherboard-strix-b350-f-gaming ?
LGA 1151 bracket.
The bottom left pin* is not popped in to the middle as the others.
*Labeled as "J" in the manual
Btw. you not supposed to tighten the top 2 screw until the bottom screws are not on. It is better to do it diagonally.
Windows reliability monitor : win key -> type : View reliability history
Windows Event Viewer : win key -> type : Event Viewer
or
Click Control Panel.
Click System and Maintenance.
Click Administrative Tools.
Double-click on Event Viewer.
Look inside Windows Logs -> System and look for error and Critical level issues
If motherboard power state is set to certain options like usb charging enabled (s2/s3) is on then yes it is possible.
S5 state in bios will cut all power if I'm not mistaking