>Yes, you must have your power supply plugged into a motherboard or get a 
>tester from PC Power & Cooling for cheap.  Go ahead & try the spare 
>motherboard.  I suspect your old MB is toast.

>Original Message -----
>From: "Miller, John" <JMiller2 at dainrauscher.com>
>To: <tclug-list at mn-linux.org>
>Sent: Thursday, August 09, 2001 7:22 AM
>Subject: [TCLUG] Dead computer
>
>
> > I got up this morning and turned on my computer and nothing happened,
> > not even the fan on the p/s turned on.  I swapped out the power supply
> > with another that I had and still nothing.  I took the original p/s and
> > plugged it in and turned it on (I had it connected to an old pc switch),
> > nothing.  I remember reading a thread on a similar subject about p/s's
> > and whether they could run with out a mb.  My question is this.  I have
> > a mb laying around, it has a cpu and memory on it.  If I plugged a p/s
> > into it and turned it on, would that be enough to get the p/s working
> > (provided it does work)?  Could this be a result of age (the computer
> > and mb are old (Cyrix 200 and AOpen 5A))
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> > John Miller
> > Dain Rauscher
> > Information Services - Capital Markets
> > Software Developer
> > Phone: 612-547-7573
> > Fax:    612-547-7580
> > IS - Mail Stop: T23A
> > E-mail: MailTo:JMiller2 at DainRauscher.com