OK, my turn to ask a PC PSU related question...
I have a home built PC based around an Asus A8N-SLI motherboard (
manual). An XP3800 CPU, 1GB RAM, decent HD, decent video. At least for its time a few years back. Generally it's operated just fine over the years and is just fine for SWMBO to dor her Facebook, email, Itunes etc.
A number of years back it wouldn't power up unless you held the power button down. At the time, I didn't have the get up and go to fix it since I found that by tying the green PS-ON low on the power supply it would start. Do that and it would start. Press the power button, remove the PS-ON short and it would keep going until it was shut down. Since it stayed on permanently I perservered with that for a couple of years. I did try another supply temporarily and it worked correctly at this stage. That supply got stolen for a HTPC though.
Finally after a couple of years, the supply wouldn't start at all - even permanently shorting PS-ON to ground. So I took it in and they replaced the supply just inside the 3 year warranty (Antec supply from a Sonata case). I got a better supply as a replacement in fact.
OK, so I thought "cool, new supply, will all be good again". Now however it will only run with the PS-ON shorted to ground which means I cannot shut it down properly without using the power switch on the back. I want to hibernate it in the interests of being a bit greener and cutting back on the power bill (100W 24/7 adds up to ~$130/year). If I leave the PS-ON to ground short permanently fitted and use the rear power switch, I can't do things like Wake on LAN if I need remote access. It's a bit of a pain to crawl on the floor to turn it off and on too.
Whilst in "off/standby" mode, the green motherboard standby LED still lights up as expected. I also have checked the extra ATX+12V connector is fitted. I even tried manually shorting the power switch header in case the power switch was a problem.
Without understanding exactly how mother boards work in terms of holding the power on, I'm at a bit of a loss. I assume the Power switch forces the supply on enough to get the motheboard up and running and then the motherboard hardware holds it on through the PS-ON signal. Somewhere in that chain my board appears broken...
Any ideas? It all points to the motherboard at this stage. I'm loathe to spend $100 on a secondhand motherboard. Since it's an old Socket 939, I'd need new RAM and a new CPU to upgrade it in any other way. Apart from this issue, it works just fine, happily running 24/7 at the moment with no issues at all.