Complete audience excitement and dark display, computer operated flawlessly
Complete audience excitement and dark display, computer operated flawlessly
I’m really struggling with this situation. The specs are as you mentioned, and my system has been working fine for a long time. Recently, the fans would suddenly spin up while the PC ran smoothly, but then the screen would go black. Over the past few weeks it’s become more frequent—now I can barely run for 10 minutes before something goes wrong. When it does, I see the EZ debug LED flashing yellow for DRAM, solid yellow for DRAM, and red for the CPU.
I tried updating drivers, checking the device manager, reinstalling the GPU drivers, and even disabling the GPU to use the built-in graphics. The problem kept coming back. I also tried connecting the display port to the motherboard’s IO, which helped temporarily. Still, it happens every day or so.
Right now I’m stuck in one of three scenarios: 1) the PC starts but no image appears, 2) the loading screen shows up and then the issue pops up quickly, or 3) I can reach the Windows desktop and everything works for 1 to 30 minutes before it fails again. The CPU stress tests with Cinebench show normal results, and my RAM is secure.
I don’t have any spare parts to swap, so I’m at the limit of what troubleshooting I can do. I’ve downloaded the latest BIOS onto a USB drive, but I’m cautious about flashing it because the PC might shut down during the process. I really appreciate any advice you can offer—I’m at my limit and need help figuring this out.
Initial thought for AM5 problems seems to be RAM instability... It appears you're running XMP/EXPO at 5600MT; try turning it off and check if the issue persists.
Thanks for your input. It’s surprising how often I overlook removing the GPU to test it separately. The system is running and holding up after 30 minutes, which is a good sign. I’ve already run stability checks in Cinebench but remain cautious—issues can pop up quickly. If my guess is correct that the GPU is the problem (and it’s past its warranty), here are some options: reaching out to the vendor or manufacturer, searching for a repair service, or replacing the GPU if needed.