Your computer shuts down because of
1. Abnormal
Temperature. Earlier your system was running smoothly, and now
it’s not. You may have to check the temperature of your PC’s CPU. Make sure the
fans run on your PC’s power and your CPU doesn’t grow warm.
2.
Power Hiccup. If not, your PC may have shut down
because of a power hiccup. You may say it’s a sudden surge of power that jolts
your PC. This results in a lag—or your computer reboots, if not it goes into
error mode. This is called the Blue Screen of Death. It’s not like final death
as in oblivion—your computer can still recover your files, but expect them to
be skewered. Imagine someone meeting a head-on collision with a ten-wheeler
truck and comes out from a long coma. What you need is a UPS and a surge
projector. Then go ahead and check the power cord in case you may have plugged
it in half way.
3.
Overheat. The least idea you can entertain
is to think that your PC may be overheating, if not your
motherboard has loose caps. When your system overheats because your CPU’s
temperature goes berserk, your PC has auto power down feature– a least your PC
does not catch fire.
4.
Software censor. Or, you may not have
installed a software that limits full access to your PC. Your PC’s
overheating is caused by overuse, of course, so you can check your PC’s BIOS
and monitor temps. Air out your unit. The most you can do is replace them
with new ones, or buy a new motherboard.
You
can put thermal paste on your PC’s CPU. You can also do a virus
scan in case there are viruses and Trojans. In a heated PC, go to
BIOs and press Supr. Check your mother board’s documentation and search
for the recommended values.
How
to troubleshoot computer shutdown
To
resolve this issue, follow these steps:
- Start your PC and go to Control Panel.
- Then click Performance and Maintenance
- Click on Power Options.
- Click the APM tab.
- Look for Enable Advanced Power Management Support and check the box
- Then, click OK.
Some
computers
have an advanced configuration power interchange that shows completed message
on the screen before your PC shuts down. If yours doesn’t have any, then you
have to use one that has a HAL. PCs with ACPI have an ACPI-compliant
basic input/output system or BIOS that allows your PC’s operating system to
turn off its power supply automatically. But HAL is installed in
computers that support APM only. The ones without this do not turn off even
when you shut them down.
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