- Joined
- Feb 13, 2016
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- 3,061 (1.03/day)
- Location
- Buenos Aires
System Name | Ryzen Monster |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 5 5600X |
Motherboard | Asus ROG Crosshair Hero VII WiFi |
Cooling | Corsair H100i RGB Platinum |
Memory | Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB (4x8GB) 3200Mhz CMW16GX4M2C3200C16 |
Video Card(s) | Asus ROG Strix RX5700XT OC 8Gb |
Storage | WD Black 500GB NVMe 250Gb Samsung SSD, OCZ 500Gb SSD WD M.2 500Gb, plus three spinners up to 1.5Tb |
Display(s) | LG 32GK650F-B 32" UltraGear™ QHD |
Case | Cooler Master Storm Trooper |
Audio Device(s) | Supreme FX on board |
Power Supply | Corsair RM850X full modular |
Mouse | Corsair M65 Pro |
Keyboard | Corsair Strafe RGB Silent |
VR HMD | Headphones Logitech G533 wireless |
Software | Windows 11 Start 11 |
Benchmark Scores | 3DMark Time Spy 4532 (9258 March 2021, 9399 July 2021) |
In another thread I thought I had solved an issue of BSODs by resolving the heat issue, but the problem returned with five or more crashes in a couple of hours.
MSI X299 Tomahawk
i7 7820X
EVGA CLC 120mm
PSU EVGA 750G3
GPU EVGA GTX1050
I went through the usual trial and errors and then remembered that the customer had said that he'd had the problem since the machine was built over three years ago. So I went back to how the SATA drive and NVMe were placed, while consulting the MSI manual, which indicates that both M.2 slots are PCIe. I then swapped the NVMe into M.2 slot 1 nearer the CPU but left the SATA drive (spinner) in SATA 1 and nothing in M.2 slot 2. The GPU is in the top PCIe x16 slot.
The machine booted faster and for the last six hours there hasn't been one crash, in spite of running several games, 3D programs and stress tests.
It's a relief but I don't understand what has changed.
MSI X299 Tomahawk
i7 7820X
EVGA CLC 120mm
PSU EVGA 750G3
GPU EVGA GTX1050
I went through the usual trial and errors and then remembered that the customer had said that he'd had the problem since the machine was built over three years ago. So I went back to how the SATA drive and NVMe were placed, while consulting the MSI manual, which indicates that both M.2 slots are PCIe. I then swapped the NVMe into M.2 slot 1 nearer the CPU but left the SATA drive (spinner) in SATA 1 and nothing in M.2 slot 2. The GPU is in the top PCIe x16 slot.
The machine booted faster and for the last six hours there hasn't been one crash, in spite of running several games, 3D programs and stress tests.
It's a relief but I don't understand what has changed.