I tried a new battery based on your suggestion but still nothing. It's as though I am not plugged in. I have a serial cable on order but doubt the system has even come alive to start outputting anything. Almost like a fuse blew and is preventing anything from getting juice. Are there LEDs on the mainboard that I should check? As far as I can see NOTHING is coming on - no fans, LEDs or anything.
Obvious questions, so apologies in advance. Did you try a different power lead? Check fuse in plug? Check any power strips? Try a different wall outlet?
Heard it many times on this thread, but just make sure the battery is giving a good voltage. Should be able to measure the voltage when it is plugged into to the socket too. Can just use a mounting screw for ground.
Make sure that there are also no shorts between the ground rail and 3v etc.
I am no expert, but dable in classic repairs from time to time and these simple things have helped me before.
If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear. George Orwell.
If your PSU has a switch, try this: Switch it off, and press several times on the tower power on button. Switch on your PSU and wait some minutes. Then press the tower power on.
Any chance bad weather mighta zapped something? It could be your gfx card, for example. It happened to my XE.
Once you've confirmed the motherboard is getting power to it (LEDs as mentioned), then I'd suggest pulling all the cards and seeing if it makes any more booting motions.
If so, plug in one card at a time (start with the gfx card) and see how things change.
This happened to me twice in the past 12 years. The 2nd time it was a bad CMOS battery and the first time I had do this technique below which ended up helping a few other users over at the Hyperion support site as well so hopefully it might work for you too;
-Turn off power to PSU. -Remove plug from PSU. -Remove power connector from the motherboard. -Take out one RAM card leaving only one to the right of the PA6T CPU (i.e. 3rd slot from the left). -While the RAM card is out check the slots 2 & 3 for dust build up (the CPU fan blows dust onto them) and use a small clean brush to remove it. -Plug power connector back on to the motherboard. -Connect PSU power & switch on PSU. -Turn on X1000. -If the X1000 boots up to Workbench, press and hold the power button for 3-5 seconds & it should shut off.
I did everything mentioned in the thread and saw the fan on the CPU twirl for a few seconds and then nothing (which was more life than it had had since dying)
So I tried once more with the original psu (as previously suggested) and low and behold the x1000 came back to life!
So thanks again to everyone for all of your help. And as an added bonus because I thought the system was dead, I'm now in the middle of getting an x5000!