Acer Nitro N50-600 doesnt want to start!

arikc94
arikc94 Member Posts: 1 New User
Hello

So my friend got a new case, and he asked me to put parts in new case, so i did. I put mobo, psu, gpu, rams, cpu, ssd, hdd in new case and PC doesnt want to start. We changed power supply, and still nothing, i tried everything to work but nothing. Even, we placed all parts back to original case, but doesnt work. Please help! Thanks

Answers

  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 45,211 Trailblazer
    If no signs of life, how sure are you that it worked in the original case before you worked on it?

    Jack E/NJ

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,873 Trailblazer
    edited June 2022
    arikc94 said:
    Hello

    So my friend got a new case, and he asked me to put parts in new case, so i did. I put mobo, psu, gpu, rams, cpu, ssd, hdd in new case and PC doesnt want to start. We changed power supply, and still nothing, i tried everything to work but nothing. Even, we placed all parts back to original case, but doesnt work. Please help! Thanks
    Was the old N60-600 desktop in its OEM case working and powering on before you took it apart? Also have you fitted the N50-600's Acer proprietary mobo properly and haven't shortened anything out by powering the mobo on and fitting this mobo into this new case that this mobo doesn't fit into?  As that could be a major cause of your problem!

    Also and another thing that could be the problem is, that you haven't connected the new case's power switch pins to the correct N50-600 mobos "F_PANEL - Front Panel Switch/LED Header" (see caption below) properly hence and why your new case power switch does not work and won't turn on. Follow the OEM case and its front header pins to the power switch and try to connect the two motherboard power switch pins together briefly, using a screwdriver or similar conductive metal tool, this should power your system on, if it doesn't then there is something wrong with your mobo or you have shortened the mobo out and you need to get an experience tech to look at it, that is if its worth the money to fix it?

    The other solution is to buy a new LGA1151 ATX mobo (that are pretty cheap) as its much cheaper than fixing the OEM one, especially that you have got a new case that doesn't need a proprietary mobo to be fitted with and can be fitted much easier with a standard mobo size, rather than the Acer proprietary N50-600 moobo, Also all the N50-600's parts can be interchanged, that is what I would be doing.