And now from the last 3 days the system doesn't boot. When I power on the computer, all fans start spinning but keyboard and mouse LEDs don't light up. Pressing CTRL+ALT+DEL doesn't reboot system neither does pressing the power button for few seconds.
I suspect that motherboard has gone kaput and isn't completing or even starting the boot process, which is why keyboard and mouse aren't getting any signal or power from motherboard or why restart or power down functionality is working.
Before the system stopped booting, I was trying to solve the machine check exception error by updating BIOS, updating chipset drivers, changing BIOS settings etc. But now I'm thinking none of it could've helped because the board itself was deteriorating.
Also during that time, I would randomly get display glitches (pic below) which could only be solved by restarting the machine so I was suspecting it might be GPU that was causing the problems.
Sometimes it would show chessboard like pattern. I guess this was also because of some issue with mobo-GPU connection?
Anyway before changing the board is there anything else I can try? Changing it is a pain so I'm trying to avoid that. π
for whatever it's worth, my powercolor red devil 5700 died in a similar way to this several years ago. Got to a point where it failed to output any display signal at all.
Powercolor had an insane return rate for their NV10 GPUs, at least in Europe.
Are you getting WHEA logs here? Do they implicate a specific component?
for whatever it's worth, my powercolor red devil 5700 died in a similar way to this several years ago. Got to a point where it failed to output any display signal at all.
That's what I thought too but as I've mentioned, keyboard and mouse are not getting any power from motherboard.
If it was GPU issue, those would have active lights with only monitor not getting any signal from GPU.
Are you getting WHEA logs here? Do they implicate a specific component?
When the system still used to turn on properly, I'd get these in Windows' event viewer:
Reported by component: Processor Core
Error Source: Machine Check Exception
Error Type: Cache Hierarchy Error
Processor APIC ID: This kept changing
Provider Name: Microsoft-Windows-WHEA-Logger
Event ID: 18
When I started looking up information about this error I found out it could be caused by literally anything. Faulty CPU, board, memory, PSU. Sometimes setting CPU voltage around 1.30-1.35 helped. In one case the guy replaced his custom power cables with default ones and that solved the issue.
Oh, cache hierarchy errors were decently common with Matisse too. I think this one may be your CPU my colleague hit this the other day with their ol' 3700X. I don't suppose you could RMA that?
I wouldn't trust that CPU at this point if you're reliably hitting that error code. Really sorry you're experiencing this. I hope you get a swift replacement.