F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop 3.9GB available from a total of 8.0GB

3.9GB available from a total of 8.0GB

3.9GB available from a total of 8.0GB

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Clareesuh
Member
245
07-18-2016, 04:01 PM
#1
I've been browsing the forums all day and noticed many similar posts about my problem—either no resolution or repetitive answers. I've tried everything suggested on the sites and with customer support. My system has 8GB of DDR4 RAM in two 4GB modules, just to keep things simple. I installed it new about six months ago, never overclocked, and it worked fine. I also never experienced any issues before yesterday. Recently, I planned to upgrade my graphics card from a 1050Ti to a 1060 with 6GB, but after installing VGA, half of my RAM was reserved for system hardware. Despite troubleshooting and no answers, I decided to reinstall the 1050Ti. Still, half my RAM remains locked by "system hardware." I ran tests to confirm both sticks are working properly, updated the BIOS, verified the power supply can handle enough power, and even restored the PC after a painful process. I’ve spent around $450 on a new VGA and won’t give up. Yes, even the BIOS shows both memory modules as functional, but it’s locked to 4096MB in the bios.
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Clareesuh
07-18-2016, 04:01 PM #1

I've been browsing the forums all day and noticed many similar posts about my problem—either no resolution or repetitive answers. I've tried everything suggested on the sites and with customer support. My system has 8GB of DDR4 RAM in two 4GB modules, just to keep things simple. I installed it new about six months ago, never overclocked, and it worked fine. I also never experienced any issues before yesterday. Recently, I planned to upgrade my graphics card from a 1050Ti to a 1060 with 6GB, but after installing VGA, half of my RAM was reserved for system hardware. Despite troubleshooting and no answers, I decided to reinstall the 1050Ti. Still, half my RAM remains locked by "system hardware." I ran tests to confirm both sticks are working properly, updated the BIOS, verified the power supply can handle enough power, and even restored the PC after a painful process. I’ve spent around $450 on a new VGA and won’t give up. Yes, even the BIOS shows both memory modules as functional, but it’s locked to 4096MB in the bios.

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DonMcOne
Member
188
07-25-2016, 06:13 AM
#2
I experienced the same problem before. Consider reinstalling the RAM using the second set of RAM slots and testing each stick separately.
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DonMcOne
07-25-2016, 06:13 AM #2

I experienced the same problem before. Consider reinstalling the RAM using the second set of RAM slots and testing each stick separately.

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xMatheusG
Member
59
07-25-2016, 12:56 PM
#3
Start by clearing the CMOS, then check what happens. It’s confusing because the Ryzen 1300X lacks built-in graphics, making it hard to tell what hardware is being used.
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xMatheusG
07-25-2016, 12:56 PM #3

Start by clearing the CMOS, then check what happens. It’s confusing because the Ryzen 1300X lacks built-in graphics, making it hard to tell what hardware is being used.

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ramonmaas95
Member
63
07-25-2016, 01:24 PM
#4
I have repositioned the RAM, transferring them from DIMM slots A1 and B1 to A2 and B2. The only unusual thing I noticed was that when I installed just one stick of RAM, the computer started without any error codes and didn’t display any signal on my monitor.
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ramonmaas95
07-25-2016, 01:24 PM #4

I have repositioned the RAM, transferring them from DIMM slots A1 and B1 to A2 and B2. The only unusual thing I noticed was that when I installed just one stick of RAM, the computer started without any error codes and didn’t display any signal on my monitor.

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IAmKillerham
Senior Member
252
07-26-2016, 12:19 PM
#5
I actually didn’t consider any other options since it isn’t an APU. I was also really confused about reserved memory, so I’ll give it a shot and see how it goes.
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IAmKillerham
07-26-2016, 12:19 PM #5

I actually didn’t consider any other options since it isn’t an APU. I was also really confused about reserved memory, so I’ll give it a shot and see how it goes.

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TheDelphox
Junior Member
18
07-26-2016, 01:45 PM
#6
No, I'm not using a 32-bit version of Windows.
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TheDelphox
07-26-2016, 01:45 PM #6

No, I'm not using a 32-bit version of Windows.

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flashfire33
Junior Member
13
07-29-2016, 05:55 PM
#7
You reset the CMOS but the system remains unchanged, displaying 3.9GB available from 8GB total, with 4.1GB allocated for hardware.
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flashfire33
07-29-2016, 05:55 PM #7

You reset the CMOS but the system remains unchanged, displaying 3.9GB available from 8GB total, with 4.1GB allocated for hardware.

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simonsimpe
Junior Member
46
08-17-2016, 06:34 AM
#8
You're running a 64-bit Windows version on an x64 machine.
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simonsimpe
08-17-2016, 06:34 AM #8

You're running a 64-bit Windows version on an x64 machine.

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Creepermillion
Junior Member
41
08-17-2016, 11:37 AM
#9
I've heard that incorrect timing and voltage settings can lead to a device being placed in a reserved system. Have you experimented with setting the voltage to 1.2 and choosing a different BIOS RAM profile? It's probably not a guaranteed solution.
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Creepermillion
08-17-2016, 11:37 AM #9

I've heard that incorrect timing and voltage settings can lead to a device being placed in a reserved system. Have you experimented with setting the voltage to 1.2 and choosing a different BIOS RAM profile? It's probably not a guaranteed solution.

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xKoalarz
Member
75
09-02-2016, 10:08 AM
#10
Double-check if Windows is triggering the problem...since it is. Look for 'System Configuration' in the search bar, tap the 'Boot' section, select 'Advanced Configuration', ensure the 'Maximum Memory' box isn't checked, then click OK and reboot.
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xKoalarz
09-02-2016, 10:08 AM #10

Double-check if Windows is triggering the problem...since it is. Look for 'System Configuration' in the search bar, tap the 'Boot' section, select 'Advanced Configuration', ensure the 'Maximum Memory' box isn't checked, then click OK and reboot.

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