Originally Posted by
bugspop1
I'm glad to hear that it was just the motherboard. A few years back I slipped with a screwdriver and shorted (fried) my Asus motherboard. At the time I was a little low on cash and purchased an MSI Motherboard (Top Of The Line MSI) for a replacement. I have had MSI Video Cards in the past and they have worked without a problem so why not use their motherboards? It ran fine for about a week and then all of the sudden everything stopped working. I tried my daughters CPU and it wouldn't work on the MSI board either (it wouldn't work on her motherboard when I put it back in either, this CPU fried her motherboard once I put it back in her computer). I took the MSI Motherboard back to the place of purchase and they wanted to give me another MSI as a replacement. I refused and they did finally replace it with an Asus. I wish I had asked them the week before how much the Asus was, it was only $3 more than the MSI I had purchased and I could have afforded that! Anyway a long story short, the MSI board fried my CPU & my daughter's CPU & motherboard. It also managed to do something to my Mirrored RAID set and I lost all of my programs & info (the Seagate drives were still ok).
That MSI motherboard cost me 2 CPU's and 1 motherboard and all the time for my data loss. Never again will I use an MSI Motherboard! I'm with you in thinking I'll stick with Asus.
Also a few years back Epox made the hot motherboards for gamers. I built a computer for my brother so he could do some gaming and he insisted on the Epox motherboard. I'm not sure if I should blame his problem on the motherboard or PSU. I wanted him to buy a reliable PSU but he didn't want to replace the PSU that came with his case. Anyway, we had major problems with the computer after a couple days. I finally talked him into purchasing a good PSU, but by then it may have damaged the motherboard or maybe the motherboard was bad from day 1, who knows? My point, I've heard really good things about Gigabyte Motheboards, the same as I had with the Epox Motherboards. Should I stick with a Motherboard I've come to trust or should I try my hand at switching???? I think I'll stick with what works for me! BTW, the Asus Motherboard I fried at the beginning of this post was totally MY FAULT, not the motherboards!