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It could also be you have some blown capacitors, and it's causing an undervoltage problem.
If you open it up, look for the little soup can looking things spaced all over the main board, they usually have a little "X" or "K" on the top, if they are flat on top, they're probably okay, if the top of any look domed they have blown, and whatever trace they feed power too is not getting enough. {looks like this http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/76/Defekte_Kondensatoren.jpg]
I had an Alienware PC a few years back [pre-Dell buyout] that kept restarting on me and that was the problem, the guy at my local Radio Shack ordered the replacement capacitors and replaced, and it lasted me up till like 2 years ago when it just became too obsolete.
Just something to look our for if you end up cracking open the case.
If you open it up, look for the little soup can looking things spaced all over the main board, they usually have a little "X" or "K" on the top, if they are flat on top, they're probably okay, if the top of any look domed they have blown, and whatever trace they feed power too is not getting enough. {looks like this http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/76/Defekte_Kondensatoren.jpg]
I had an Alienware PC a few years back [pre-Dell buyout] that kept restarting on me and that was the problem, the guy at my local Radio Shack ordered the replacement capacitors and replaced, and it lasted me up till like 2 years ago when it just became too obsolete.
Just something to look our for if you end up cracking open the case.