Tea
Storage? I am Storage!
Guy rang up today, had some problems. From his description, it sounded like it was probably a power supply going bad. Told him to bring it in and we would swap out the PSU.
So he turned up an hour or two later, some two or three year old shiny silver thing with a window in it. Pentium 4 2800, 1GB RAM, Gigabyte mainboard with a SiS chipset. Seemed a reasonable quality system, not the best but OK. (Don't care much for SiS chipsets, or, indeed, for Gigabyte boards for Intel chips - they are much better at AMD boards, IMO.)
Went to pull the old power supply out. It was an Antec 350w - Antecs are supposed to be pretty decent, but even the best ones fail sometimes, and the symptoms still sounded like PSU to me. Undid 4 screws, wouldn't budge. Looked a little harder: there was a metal bracket holding it in. Unscrew bracket. Still won't come out because the bracket is affixed in some way behind the power supply. OK, time to pull the back off the case. Can't: it's rivetted on. Right, maybe the top pops off. Nope: that's rivetted on too. Right, you must have to remove the sturdy rail that runs between the back of the case and the optical drive cage. Nope. that is rivetted!
Grrr.
There was absolutely no way to remove the PSU with out removing the metal bracket first. And ... here comes the good bit .... to remove the bracket, you have to first remove the motherboard. Yep, fair dinkum. To change an Antec power supply in a fairly recent model Antec-branded case, you have to:
* Undo two screws, remove side of case
* Undo four screws at back of PSU
* Undo screw retaining outer part of bracket.
* Undo three screws retaining video card, network card, and sound card.
* Remove video card, network card, and sound card.
* Undo six screws retaining motherboard
* Remove motherboard
* Unclip hard drive cage, disconnect HDD & FDD, remove cage.
* Undo four screws retaining optical drives
* Unplug cables from optical drives
* (with difficulty, cause there ain't much room) push PSU backwards, twist., and remove.
So, apart from the power supply, what was left in the case by the time it was possible to get the damn thing out? Nothing. Not one damn thing. Disassemble the entire bloody computer, just to change a faulty power supply. That sucks. I mean that seriously sucks. There is no way in hell that we will ever buy an Antec case after meeting this particular design disaster. F&ck me, I'd sooner work on a Hewlett-Packard than that POS.
Un-be-lievable!
So he turned up an hour or two later, some two or three year old shiny silver thing with a window in it. Pentium 4 2800, 1GB RAM, Gigabyte mainboard with a SiS chipset. Seemed a reasonable quality system, not the best but OK. (Don't care much for SiS chipsets, or, indeed, for Gigabyte boards for Intel chips - they are much better at AMD boards, IMO.)
Went to pull the old power supply out. It was an Antec 350w - Antecs are supposed to be pretty decent, but even the best ones fail sometimes, and the symptoms still sounded like PSU to me. Undid 4 screws, wouldn't budge. Looked a little harder: there was a metal bracket holding it in. Unscrew bracket. Still won't come out because the bracket is affixed in some way behind the power supply. OK, time to pull the back off the case. Can't: it's rivetted on. Right, maybe the top pops off. Nope: that's rivetted on too. Right, you must have to remove the sturdy rail that runs between the back of the case and the optical drive cage. Nope. that is rivetted!
Grrr.
There was absolutely no way to remove the PSU with out removing the metal bracket first. And ... here comes the good bit .... to remove the bracket, you have to first remove the motherboard. Yep, fair dinkum. To change an Antec power supply in a fairly recent model Antec-branded case, you have to:
* Undo two screws, remove side of case
* Undo four screws at back of PSU
* Undo screw retaining outer part of bracket.
* Undo three screws retaining video card, network card, and sound card.
* Remove video card, network card, and sound card.
* Undo six screws retaining motherboard
* Remove motherboard
* Unclip hard drive cage, disconnect HDD & FDD, remove cage.
* Undo four screws retaining optical drives
* Unplug cables from optical drives
* (with difficulty, cause there ain't much room) push PSU backwards, twist., and remove.
So, apart from the power supply, what was left in the case by the time it was possible to get the damn thing out? Nothing. Not one damn thing. Disassemble the entire bloody computer, just to change a faulty power supply. That sucks. I mean that seriously sucks. There is no way in hell that we will ever buy an Antec case after meeting this particular design disaster. F&ck me, I'd sooner work on a Hewlett-Packard than that POS.
Un-be-lievable!