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Processor | Ryzen 2600 |
---|---|
Motherboard | X470 Tachi Ultimate |
Cooling | AM3+ Wraith CPU cooler |
Memory | C.R.S. |
Video Card(s) | GTX 970 |
Software | Linux Peppermint 10 |
Benchmark Scores | Never high enough |
"IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL" is typically a RAM voltage error due to not enough voltage to the sticks for the speeds and timings they are set for - This is a common error seen when OC'ing.
@ the OP, be sure you have the correct amount of voltage in use for the sticks such as if they are rated for 1.50v's for example. You'd want to make sure they are getting at least that much is not a little more. If you must, a little more won't hurt them and would probrably take care of the error popping up.
If the set is rated for 1.50/1.55v's for example giving them about 1.60/1.62v's (Max) won't hurt them, just be sure whatever RAM voltage you decide to use is set manually in the BIOS.
If all else fails make sure the board isn't setting them up with timings and speeds they don't want to run at and you can make sure of it by setting timings and speeds manually, preferably by their specs.
You can tweak later because right now the focus is to solve your error problem first.
Speaking of that, since the PSU itself is in question I'd tackle that first, THEN go for the RAM settings but that's what the error itself is normally about.
@ the OP, be sure you have the correct amount of voltage in use for the sticks such as if they are rated for 1.50v's for example. You'd want to make sure they are getting at least that much is not a little more. If you must, a little more won't hurt them and would probrably take care of the error popping up.
If the set is rated for 1.50/1.55v's for example giving them about 1.60/1.62v's (Max) won't hurt them, just be sure whatever RAM voltage you decide to use is set manually in the BIOS.
If all else fails make sure the board isn't setting them up with timings and speeds they don't want to run at and you can make sure of it by setting timings and speeds manually, preferably by their specs.
You can tweak later because right now the focus is to solve your error problem first.
Speaking of that, since the PSU itself is in question I'd tackle that first, THEN go for the RAM settings but that's what the error itself is normally about.
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