Dead mobo or CPU?

Stoly

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So I'm checking a friend's PC that won't boot.
Its a gigabyte B550 mobo coupled with a Ryzen 5 5600G

The pc will turn on, fans will spin, but it won't boot, I tested the ram PSU,, SSD and videocard separately and they all work fine. Thing is the CPU will not get hot at all, also the PC won't turn off with the on/off button after 5+ seconds, I have to switch off the PSU.

Unfortunately, I don't a spare mobo or CPU to test which one is faulty.

I tend to side with the mobo since CPU deaths are rare, the CPU Heatspreader was quite dusty, but I've seen worse.

Thoughts? recommendations?
 
So I'm checking a friend's PC that won't boot.
Its a gigabyte B550 mobo coupled with a Ryzen 5 5600G

The pc will turn on, fans will spin, but it won't boot, I tested the ram PSU,, SSD and videocard separately and they all work fine. Thing is the CPU will not get hot at all, also the PC won't turn off with the on/off button after 5+ seconds, I have to switch off the PSU.

Unfortunately, I don't a spare mobo or CPU to test which one is faulty.

I tend to side with the mobo since CPU deaths are rare, the CPU Heatspreader was quite dusty, but I've seen worse.

Thoughts? recommendations?
Wait the heat spreader was DUSTY like dust settled on it? Good lord the throttling. Could be CPU OR Motherboard but I would lean to mobo as well.
 
Any debug LED's on the mobo? I would think mobo first but I seen in some repair vids that ryzen CPU's do die (seen 3 or 4 dead ones in around 20 vids orso)
 
Any debug LED's on the mobo? I would think mobo first but I seen in some repair vids that ryzen CPU's do die (seen 3 or 4 dead ones in around 20 vids orso)
My thought too. It could be either, but much better odds of it being a motherboard than CPU
 
I actually do have a B550 motherboard lying around but I'm not sure it works either: it behaves exactly the same as the other one.

My friend is getting a new mb to test the cpu, worst case he'll get a Ryzen 7 5700.

he doesn't have the budget to upgrade to the 7000 series much less 9000 series.

he doesn't do much gaming other than WoW and LoL.
 
Any debug LED's on the mobo? I would think mobo first but I seen in some repair vids that ryzen CPU's do die (seen 3 or 4 dead ones in around 20 vids orso)

In my 35+ years as a pc enthusiast I've only seen 2 dead CPUs a P4 and an AMD Duron from clients.
In my mind intel CPU are for all means and purposes, inmortal.

My friend's fear is that it might end up being both. Very unlikely, but not out of the question.
 
Can't say I've truly ever seen a CPU die either. I'm sure they do under the right conditions such as getting fried from a powersurge or improper cooling but despite a dozen or so personal builds, and few on the side, and several prebuilts that I've upgraded relentlessly until none of the original parts were left aside from a case, I've only seen it happen once and I'm pretty I caused it to happen from not properly cooling an ancient P4. I've maintained well over a hundred at my day job that includes servers, laptops, surface pros, and desktops with generational tech going back two decades as well.

All that being said, of course check each component. I have seen situations where a GPU or PSU can cause similar issues. Seen a multitude of workstations behave this way after their PSUs tanked. I've also seen stupid things like a sticky power button give grief or a case wire to the mobo was plugged into the wrong pin. On that note, can you disconnect the case and get it to POST? Is the mobo one that can have the BIOS flashed w/o a CPU? Maybe something got botched there and needs a reset. It's kind of a wild goose chase but yeah, sometimes its something really simple and for sure it might be the mobo.
 
Can't say I've truly ever seen a CPU die either. I'm sure they do under the right conditions such as getting fried from a powersurge or improper cooling but despite a dozen or so personal builds, and few on the side, and several prebuilts that I've upgraded relentlessly until none of the original parts were left aside from a case, I've only seen it happen once and I'm pretty I caused it to happen from not properly cooling an ancient P4. I've maintained well over a hundred at my day job that includes servers, laptops, surface pros, and desktops with generational tech going back two decades as well.

All that being said, of course check each component. I have seen situations where a GPU or PSU can cause similar issues. Seen a multitude of workstations behave this way after their PSUs tanked. I've also seen stupid things like a sticky power button give grief or a case wire to the mobo was plugged into the wrong pin. On that note, can you disconnect the case and get it to POST? Is the mobo one that can have the BIOS flashed w/o a CPU? Maybe something got botched there and needs a reset. It's kind of a wild goose chase but yeah, sometimes its something really simple and for sure it might be the mobo.

I took everything off the case and tested it individually. I tested the mobo/cpu with a different PSU and RAM, won't post, won't turn off.

Tested the RAM/SSD/PSU/GPU on a fully working setup. Everything runs fine.

My friend is tight on money right now, so it might take a while till he gets the parts.
 
Sounds like you pretty much covered all the bases and back to the same question mobo or CPU. Sorry couldn't be more helpful. Every now and then I hear stories of a bent pin or a socket issue which might be the culprit, sometimes even a bad solder point (saw that happen on a motherboard a real long time ago where one gave after years of service).
 
Sounds like you pretty much covered all the bases and back to the same question mobo or CPU. Sorry couldn't be more helpful. Every now and then I hear stories of a bent pin or a socket issue which might be the culprit, sometimes even a bad solder point (saw that happen on a motherboard a real long time ago where one gave after years of service).

Unfortunately, the mobo is too big to fit on my toaster/oven. The idea of "baking it" crossed my mind.
 
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