Well... Here is something you might want to check out.
My computer was built a year ago, board of choice was the X79 UD5. Everything was great until about a month or so ago, when the computer went into (lo and behold, this may sound familiar) a continuous loop of restarts. The fan would start going, then stop. Rinse and repeat. After pretty much ruling out everything else, the only remaining options were the board or the cpu.
CPU was fine.
Board was exchanged under warranty to a factory re-cleared similar board. Checked on site, worked fine. After being installed in the computer, you guessed it, the restart loop started again.
Out of sheer frustration, my techie (who also has an electronics degree) started pushing on different areas on the ("new") board to see if it was a connection issue.
Turned out that there is a little coil on the board that supplies power to the cpu. When pushed a bit, start up was fine. When the tiny pressure was released, reboots returned. At this point the electronics expetise came to play.
Problem was narrowed down to a problem with the soldiering of the "legs" on the other side. The suspicious area was cleared, and inspection found that the area that was supposed to be soldiered (and thus "green free"), was "green".
Said area was cleaned. Resoldiered manually (there was really no point to take the board back to be exchanged again after board 2 suffered from the same issue).
The computer is now working perfectly.
From the desctiption of your problem, I'm willing to bet that you have the same problem, and suggest you ask the local warranty representative to try and check along the lines described here. If your computer will indeed boot up with a small amount of pressure applied on the right spot to take care of the connection problem, you will know for sure.
And a tiny suggestion for the powers that be, please check the production line and make sure the soldiering process is configured properly. I googled the problem I had, and discovered I was not alone with those symptoms.
I guess I'm just lucky to have a pro building my computers for me.
If this reboot problem is happening all over, then you guys may really want to check and see if there is a repeating problem in the manufacturing process. Everything looked great upon visual inspection. Had to use a soldiering iron to expose the area to see that the factory soldiering process simply "missed" its mark, and a "manual fix" had to be applied by someone who really knew their stuff.
At least the computer is finally back now. I just hope the same problem does not repeat itself with a different "loose connection" at a later date.