- Joined
- May 30, 2018
- Messages
- 1,890 (0.74/day)
- Location
- Cusp Of Mania, FL
Processor | Ryzen 9 3900X |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus ROG Strix X370-F |
Cooling | Dark Rock 4, 3x Corsair ML140 front intake, 1x rear exhaust |
Memory | 2x8GB TridentZ RGB [3600Mhz CL16] |
Video Card(s) | EVGA 3060ti FTW3 Ultra Gaming |
Storage | 970 EVO 500GB nvme, 860 EVO 250GB SATA, Seagate Barracuda 1TB + 4TB HDDs |
Display(s) | 27" MSI G27C4 FHD 165hz |
Case | NZXT H710 |
Audio Device(s) | Modi Multibit, Vali 2, Shortest Way 51+ - LSR 305's, Focal Clear, HD6xx, HE5xx, LCD-2 Classic |
Power Supply | Corsair RM650x v2 |
Mouse | iunno whatever cheap crap logitech *clutches Xbox 360 controller security blanket* |
Keyboard | HyperX Alloy Pro |
Software | Windows 10 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | ask your mother |
So I've seen. It makes sense, since basically everything that happens between components and software is dependent on memory having all of the right instructions and feeding the information whenever asked. Everything stops when it does.When bad ram is in the mix it can cause all sorts of problems from bsods to resets.
Ahh, makes sense. I guess I'm a little confused because I get both the restart and BSODs. I'm guessing it depends on the nature of the crash. I just found it strange that when it restarted without a BSOD, I couldn't even find any information on why in the event viewer. All it would tell me that it rebooted to recover from a crash. And I'm sitting here wondering "Well, yeah. But WHY did it crash?"Resets tell me that Windows is set to automatically restart upon crashing. To get a bsod to appear you must disable windows from auto restarting upon failure.
I'm sure its in there somewhere. Maybe I'm filtering things down wrong.
Yeap. Kind of a bummer. I generally like kingston. Incidentally for their reputation (and my experience) of good reliability. Just got unlucky I guess. Gonna have to contact them. Hopefully I can keep the working one... ...once I figure out which one it is. Since they both pass memtest and just generally don't show measurable signs of failure, I'll have to try running them separately and see which rig crashes. <_< That's why I was really hoping for some definitive proof basically showing me, "This particular module is bad."So the problem was fixed on your rig when you swapped ram and it moved to the other machine, it is the ram there bucko.
I guess if I can't keep the working one, the living room rig goes down for a while. Or maybe I run both on 4gb lol.
Gotta say, this is about the least eventful hardware failure I have ever dealt with. I once had a PSU literally go up in sparks and smoke, followed by very loud and constant humming and whining. I've seen a couple of HDD's fail in a dramatic fashion, with nasty scraping, chirping, and clicking/clacking. I've seen capacitors vent rather violently (for what they are anyway.)
Thanks to all for your patient input... ...especially eidairaman1. I know it must've felt like a test at some points, like I was just wasting your time. If it did I swear I never meant to and I really do appreciate it! I'm just getting back into this stuff and for the past several years I've used nothing but linux, so it's all basically new to me at this point. I really appreciate the point-to-point guidance. I learned a few things about troubleshooting on windows that I think will be worth a stick of ram in the end! Glad we could get this figured out.
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