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Hey all, Does anyone else have a problem where their PC's USB ports aren't powered when the PC is off? I recently upgraded my entire PC, which has resulted in the above behaviour. This has had a knock-on effect that my wireless mouse is no longer charged and means that when I goto use it it is usually flat and I have to use it wired throughout my use of the computer. Has anyone else encountered this problem and if so, how did you resolve it? For reference my MB is an MSI P67A-GD53. P.S. the charging cradle is actually the wireless receiver so I can't plug the cradle into a wall socket adaptor, has to be plugged into the PC. |
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1/04/12 5:33:47 AM#2
It is actually a safety system. Using power for stuff like that when your PC is turned off is rather pointless and I never even seen a motherboard that does that in many years. If you for some reason needs powered USB ports while the computer is off you really should get a USB hub with a external power source. Most external mouses have a docking cable for this reason. My recommendation is that you either get a USB hub that you can plug in separatley or that you instead of turning the computer off just uses sleepmode. It is the simplest thing that require nothing extra. |
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Thanks for your reply. My old MX revolution came with a seperate cable for powering the charging cradle which is great, but I have since upgraded to a Razer Mamba and now only have the usb header for power. You say that USB headers are no longer powered for safety reasons, but I feel that leaving your PC on all the time is sleep mode is definately not safe to do (especially when your at work all day or asleep in bed). Guess I have no choice, but to go the powered hub route which isn't ideal as I feel that giving you an option to turn on this functionality in the bios or via jumpers on the MB would be a much nicer solution. I've been doing a bit of googling and typically I go with Belkin for this kind of thing, but I can't find a decent USB hub from them that comes with a power adaptor, does anyone have any recommendations for a decent compact powered USB hub (maximum of 4 ports to keep it compact)? |
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1/04/12 12:33:13 PM#4
Motherboards have to be wired specifically to offer USB power even when the computer is off in order to make that work. A motherboard manufacturer can do that or not. Some do and some don't. I don't think it's a safety issue. Even USB 3.0 is only rated at 0.9 A and 5 V, which comes to 4.5 W. That's not dangerous. |
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1/04/12 4:11:21 PM#5
Yeah, I don't think any of it is a safety issue: the USB Power, or putting your computer to Sleep rather than Off. USB Power is mainly because it's an added expense that most people don't care about. A powered external hub easily remedies that problem. There isn't really any safety issue there. Laptops don't typically do it for the obvious battery concern. Gigabyte calls it "On/Off USB Charge Port". Sleep versus Off: again, no safety issue. Hibernation uses the same power draw as off (all your RAM gets written to the hard drive, and the computer shuts completely down anyway). Even normal Sleep, only the DIMMs get a small amount of power (to retain their contents). Unless you are talking about performing work on the inside of the case, in which case you should always remove the power cable (and battery from a laptop) and properly ground yourself - which would remove power from the computer even if it were Sleeping (or even fully running). |
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1/04/12 4:48:57 PM#6
I believe all that you need to do is to go into your CMOS and under power management, disable the EuP 2013 setting. All of my posts are either intelligent, thought provoking, funny, satirical, sarcastic or intentionally disrespectful. Take your pick. |
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1/04/12 5:27:24 PM#7
On a laptop, even if the thing is plugged in I think the danger is far more to the hardware than you. My laptop is relatively beefy (for something with a non-Nvidia GPU ;) ), and its power pack is only capable of delivering 70W. I think I'd have to try pretty hard to hurt myself on that (maybe sticking one's tongue to the power circuitry while it's plugged in?).
On a desktop, there's more concern, partly because they're capable of drawing/outputting an order of magnitude more power (if it's really beefy), and partly because you have parts with giant capacitors attached, especially in the PSU, that can hurt you very badly. Still, a USB port isn't going to do anything. Even if <5W was dangerous, you'd have to try pretty hard to actually touch the leads on the USB port :) |
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lectrocuda
Hard Core Member
Joined: 6/13/10
To the caterpillar it is the end of the world. To the master, it is a butterfly. |
1/04/12 5:32:41 PM#8
Originally posted by Quizzical .005 amps is fatal
.9 amps is enough juice to kill quite a few people. Just saying.
Not that its likely To the caterpillar it is the end of the world, to the master, it is a butterfly. |
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1/04/12 5:58:56 PM#9
Originally posted by lectrocuda At 500000 V, perhaps. At 5 V, not unless it's very carefully targeted at some very sensitive areas. Meaning, not something you could accidentally do. |
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Originally posted by eyelolled Thats actually what MSI told me to do this morning, but I'm afraid it didn't work :( Was really crossing my fingers that it would. Guess its my own fault for buying an MSI MB, from the poor Engrish in their manuals to their poorly explained bios :( |
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1/05/12 2:31:44 PM#11
Actually the military uses 30V as their threshold for "lethal" voltage - the amperage is about right: I had heard 1mA is noticeable, 5mA hurts, and anything over 10mA can cause muscle spasms and potentially be lethal since it may not be possible to let go of the power source. But I = V / R (Ohm's Law), and your body resistance is highly variable (and typically pretty high) - so you do need a good bit of voltage to push that current. Now you would have to be standing in salt water with an open wound to actually get a lethal shock from 30V - but on a ship at sea that's remotely possible. While working on a USB port, not really likely, and the only place there is more than 30V inside a computer in the first place would be inside the sealed part of a power supply where you have line voltage. |
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1/05/12 3:22:32 PM#12
Originally posted by darkcircuit It doesn't look like the motherboard has wake from USB except in S3, so if the EuP2013 setting didn't change anything then a powered USB hub is the best choice if you want to have your system shut right down.
All of my posts are either intelligent, thought provoking, funny, satirical, sarcastic or intentionally disrespectful. Take your pick. |
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Originally posted by eyelolled Thanks for your help :) have ordered a 4-port powered USB hub from D-Link |
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1/11/12 8:18:28 PM#14
Originally posted by darkcircuit Why do ypu power off ur computer? Do u do the same for ur fridge, or clock radeo..? A modern computer is meant to stay on 24/7 and go into sleep mode on it's own.. consuming less wattage than ur cable box, etc. |
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1/11/12 9:05:14 PM#15
I turn mine off completely. There's no reason to leave it on if you aren't using it. Your refridgerator or clock aren't good examples: the fridge only runs as it needs to, because of an invention called a thermostat, which just turns on the compressor when the temperature gets too high. Your clock stays on because without power, it couldn't keep the time (your computer has a battery in order to do this when it's turned off). Your computer goes to sleep so that... it starts up faster when you get back, it isn't doing anything while in sleep mode. With an SSD, my computer starts up pretty fast as is, so I really don't save any time, and I have to pay (even a small amount) for electricity for the privilege of doing so. And as a matter of fact, I do have most of my appliances on power strips, which get turned off entirely when they aren't in use. That may sound excessive, but in California electricity gets expensive fast, once you start to bump into the third and higher tiers (which happens nearly every month in the summer because of air conditioning - $0.28-0.32 per kWh - the national average is around $0.11). All those vampire devices add up. |
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1/14/12 5:49:48 PM#16
Originally posted by Ridelynn
I believe you are ignorant that, when using Win7, your computer acts as an appliance. Matter of fact, you computer uses less power THAN YOUR CLOCK RADEO when in sleep mode... derp! How can u not understand that^...?
Educate yourself on the standbye modes of a modern computer.. when u "awake your computer from sleep mode" it is using less power than a typical cable box is when powered "off". I applaud enyone striving to save energy, but if you only use ur system uber-peroidically like once a day, then by all means save urself some pennies. But honestly... are you that dire that you unplug your cable box every time you shut it off? How about your Microwave..? They are both still on...
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1/14/12 10:13:25 PM#17
When I built my computer, I timed how long it took to wake up from sleep, and how long it took to do a cold boot. The cold boot was faster. So I disabled sleep mode and turn the computer off for the night. |
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1/15/12 6:44:19 PM#18
A computer turned off uses no power, which is infinitely more efficient than "some power" that is used while in sleep mode. I don't have a cable box. I do unplug my microwave. I don't have a clock radio (I use my phone for an alarm clock). I do unplug my TV and PS3 and DVD Player when I'm not using them. I think I understand it pretty well. |
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1/15/12 6:48:30 PM#19
Originally posted by Quizzical I think it is about the same for me, but it is more annoying when you wake it. Still, in OPs case it makes sense to sleep it instead. |
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1/16/12 12:00:11 AM#20
Originally posted by Ridelynn
Thats is awsome..!
Unfortunately, it doesn't matter to anyone but you, not the OP. I have 3 computers that never shut off. All wall sockets have energy readers on them. I use solar power to subsidize my carbon portfolio... because that makes more sense then unplugging everything I use daily, hourly.. Don't ever want to constantly move a 60" TV around, to unplug it everytime I goto bed.. then, in the morning re-program it... etc
If you are a prosumer, instead of a consumer you can buy things that mirror your needs. I applaud anyone who UNPLUGS their television every time...!
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