Well, that's a new advice on motherboards and power suplies, guess
I'll chill and read more before getting mine. I have been an Asus user
for about 6 years and not many problems, guess we all have to walk to
soyo's valley of death to learn more about mobos, I'll research the
MSI and DFI mobos for now.

Again Bob, thanks for the advice, that was EXACTLY what happened to my
power suply, so, I'm considering getting a new one instead of using my
fixed one, because it fried exactly in the conditions you mentioned
(and I feel better now knowing it wasn't my mistake), that cost me
some money and fried some chipset in my mobo, that now turns off by no
reason at randomic timed spaces (from 5 seconds to a minute and a
half) and that was the main reason for getting a new one.

Ok, I am far OT here, so, lets talk about gentoo, some of you have the
a8n deluxe, and I wonder how compatible the 8.1 sound, the lan and
acpi are with Gentoo, its my default system and right now I don't plan
changing it.

On 7/17/05, Bob Sanders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sun, 17 Jul 2005 09:38:51 +0200
> Jarry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> 
> > If I would like to build a new comp today, I would probably go
> > with EpoX, DFI, Gigabyte or MSI motherboards...
> >
> 
> Personally, my list would be Epox and Tyan.  Though Tyan is pretty
> conservative, and the bios doesn't ever seem to work with ATI cards.
> 
> MSI used to be a lot better, but are about the same a DFI now, both
> better, IMO, than Asus.
> 
> btw - my recommendation of PC Power & Cooling power supplies is not
> because there are no others as good, it's that I've had more fails and seen
> more fails with other brands.  When looking for a power supply, use PC
> Power & Cooling as a reference standard.  Make sure the power supply
> you're looking at can provide the same sustained currents on +3.3V, +5V, and
> +12V as the equivalent PC Power and Cooling.  Also, insure the combined
> sustained wattage rating of the +3.3V, +5V, and +12V are the same as the
> PC Power and Cooling.
> 
> I've been burned more than once by believing online reviews of power supplies.
> Sure they work, for awhile, most times, but put them in a real system and you 
> may
> find they die on turn-on.  Or worse, when the room temp is near 90F and the
> system hangs a lot because of voltage sags.
> 
> Or they can't handle the current draw at 90F and overcurrent.  Do this a few 
> times
> and then the machine never comes back on; because, the power supply just blew
> a fuse - it has to go back to the factory to get repaired (yes, you can do it 
> yourself).
> 
> Regardless, don't spend US$300 on a Gfx card then balk at US$100 for a power
> supply.  You'll have the power supply for 3 yrs and the Gfx card for 1 yr.
> 
> Bob
> -
> --
> gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
> 
> 


-- 
Daniel da Veiga
Computer Operator - RS - Brazil

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