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daveso
Posts: 7,814
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daveso
Posts: 7,814
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Does it stop before or after trying to start Windows? Can you get into the start menu? Can you boot from USB stick or CD?
The only time something like that happened to me was with a flaky power supply. Troubleshooting basically means replacing it. Got a spare?
Try boot with Linux live version. If it fails, problem is hardware.
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Try to access BIOS using Delete or F10 or F11 or F12 etc. keys, if you cannot then it is hardware failure. Not easy to diagnose, it require experience and knowledge. Therefore need to get support from manufacture or 3rd party providers.
Sometimes, resetting the BIOS might also do the trick. How to do that varies though which each motherboard.... ( I was lucky enough that the MB on my system had a clear CMOS button on ther back when I had this happening to my system, though that was not related to any update.....).
This video might help a bit...
I had such a problem, twice now actually, after updating the bios on my Gigabyte motherboard with a B450 chip (runs AMD Ryzen CPUs) and to remedy it on boot I go into the BIOS and rearrange the boot devices to but the device with Windows 10 system disk first, save, reboot, and that takes care of it.
Oops, double post.
Any light at all, ever, on the display? If not, then double check your monitor(s). If you have more than one, perhaps the graphics card has switched default output to a single monitor that happens to be off? (Happened to me a couple of times.)
OOPS, nevermind, I just re-read your post and you've already tried removing the graphics card. 
OK, are there any blinking lights at all? Disk LEDs, network activity LEDs, motherboard LEDs, etc.? I'm still working on the assumption that the machine is working but you just can't see it on the display.
If you have a nice enough motherboard it would have some LEDs that might be lit to indicate how far it got in the boot process.
Find (or lookup) your motherboard documentation.
Um, the monitor is working isn't it? Are you sure it's plugged in? (just had to say it)
Ditto on the suggestion from @glaseye...I would make sure that it's not the BIOS before moving to bad hardware...especially if you had no odd symptoms beforehand. Some motherboards come with a backup BIOS, which is very nice indeed because if the primary BIOS bricks, then the backup will engage and overwrite the primary. I miss that feature with my previous Gigabyte motherboard. I currently have a MSI motherboard and the one time my BIOS borked up, I had to reset it by removing the CMOS battery for like 5min.
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take out all the ram and try to turn it on (you need to have beeper connected )
then it should start beeping because it has no ram which proves that more or less everything is working on the cpu side
removing CMOS battery may not be enough you have to short it to discharge everything
Yeah, you have to give it a bit to make sure there is no charge left. I was just reading on a reddit thread someone suggested to take the battery out and then go drop a nice long bm and by the time you're done, it'll be ready to go, lol.
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Glad you're working again, but don't you hate it when your memory gets too pooped to play?
If you believe it's the RAM that's the issue, and it sounds like it may be, you should definitely run a diagnostic tool like memtest over night. https://www.memtest86.com/
If there's any errors at all, the ram is bad (if it's a kit and one stick is bad you should replace both) and you should contact the seller for replacement.
buggers never told me I could get a replacement when one of my sticks carked it