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PC shuts down randomly

Anonymous
2024-08-02T08:17:23+00:00

I have a newly built Gaming PC (Maybe 4 months old) that will randomly shut off. It doesn't need to be under any particular load or high temp. It will shut off while booting up a game or browsing the internet. I have CPU and GPU temps displaying on my LCD and they never go over 80 Degrees.

My part list is;

Case : HYTE Y70 (no LCD)

Mobo : Asus ROG Strix B650E-F

GPU : Asus Tuf 4080 Super

CPU Ryzen 7 7800X3D

Cooler : NZXT Kraken Elite 360

Memory : Corsair Dominator Platinum RGB DDR5 4x16gb 6000MHZ CL30 AMD EXPO

Storage : Corsair MP600 PRO NH 500GB

           Corsair MP600 CVore XT 4TB

           12 TB Seagate Iron Wolf HDD

PCU : MSI MPG A1000G

Fans : Lian Li Infinity 120 x 7

      NZXT  F120 Core x3

Cable Extenders : Cablemod Pro Modmesh Sleeved 121VHPWR Stealthsense Cable Extension Kit

Latest Error Code

Log Name : Windows Powershell

Source : Powershell

Event ID : 403

Task Category : Engine Lifecycle

Engine state is changed from Available to Stopped. 

Details: 

NewEngineState=Stopped

PreviousEngineState=Available

SequenceNumber=12819

HostName=Default Host

HostVersion=5.1.22621.3958

HostId=339d7799-a95d-44da-9f23-baec3699dfdd

HostApplication=C:\Program Files (x86)\ASUS\GameFirst\\GameTurbo.exe /min /autostart

EngineVersion=5.1.22621.3958

RunspaceId=d40b2d03-3241-49c4-8951-5d0ca7d4f01e

PipelineId=

CommandName=

CommandType=

ScriptName=

CommandPath=

CommandLine=

I have tried playing around and lessening graphics settings but that seams like my PC shouldn't need to do that. I have undone and reattached all the cables. I have reseated the GPU and RAM.

Is there a diagnostic tool that will give me more specifics on the cause of the failure? Is it just the PSU is too small?

Windows for home | Windows 11 | Performance and system failures

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  1. DaveM121 879.4K Reputation points Independent Advisor
    2024-08-02T08:51:17+00:00

    HI, I am Dave, I will help you with this.

    It is unlikely to be your PSU, that is 1000W and should have no problem powering your components.

    The best option is disable any overclocking you may have on your CPU, and if there is and XMP (DOCP) profile set on your RAM, set that to default, and if you have more than one RAM stick, run your PC on one stick at a time to test if your system is stable.

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