For the Mobo installation, check if you have connected "on/off" switch correctly. Some older systems switch on and of directly from PSU, while today's systems switch is connected to the motherboard. It usualy means shorting 2 pins.
For troubleshooting the newborn custom made machine, the prudent thing to do is to install the beeper. It can "tell" you why it won't turn on.
Also having a IDE HD cable plugged in upside-down would result in such behaviour.
I suggest that you start with PSU-CPU-MOBO only (no drives, cards VGA or memory) to see if it would move from square 1.
For the monitor:
Monitors usualy have 3-5 year warranty, so tf it is 2 yrs old than the warranty should cover it. And I'm 100% certain that it is faulty. That burning smell you described is comming from your monitior. A broken solder would make sparks that produce smell.
If the warranty is gone I suggest that, if you feel brave enough, to openup the birthday gift (I mean monitor) and look for the burn-marks. My bet is that you'll find cracked solder with brownish surroundings. You might need a magnifying glass if the solder is small.
You'll need soldetron. Just touch the cracked solder till it melts a little and you're done. I did that to my ex monitor couple of times and prolonget it's life for couple more years. And I'm not a crafty electritian.
BE SURE TO UNPLUGG THE MONITOR AND SWITCH IT ON AFTER YOU UNPLUGG IT.
Or you can allway get it to the nearest service. Won't cost you arm and a leg.
In the mean time try another monitor.
Chaky
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Beeper is one small basic speaker. The connection for the beeper is usualy in a same row of pins where you connect the leds, reset button and on/off switch. And, yes, the manual has the "how to" ilustrated. If you have some old PC lying around, you can use one off it.
Depending on a BIOS manufacturer, (Award, AMI... you can see which one you got in the manual) some beep codes are described here:
http://www.pchell.com/hardware/beepcodes.shtml
BTW, you rma'd the P4800 SE, and now your mobo is....?
Chaky
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Hi. I just recovered from massive system meltdown. Guess my mobo vendor.... ASUS.
Ant it is not just reinstall-windows-meldown. It is get-IDE-HD-coz-SATA-won't-format-nor-boot-even-with-f6-drivers meltdown. Funny thing, I emailed ASUS yesterday asking them some info and automatic reply was "The system has received your query. We will process your query ASAP. However, due to vast number of queries (read: vast number of ppl having problems with ASUS products) waiting to be processed each day (!), we may not be able to respond your query immediately. If your query is not replied within 48 hours bla,bla"
Kind of, speaks for itself.
I'm thinking about returning it to the store (it's still covered by waranty). Nforce 4 has just too many bugs. Combined with XP bugs....BAM.
Also thinking aboul linux.
I support your decision to not deal with buggy mobo. But going for Dell... I think you should look at Dell's forums and see for your self what ppl talk about. I hear that Dell's DVD burners don't have real firmware support. That's what ppl complain about.
Chaky
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