F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Crash

Crash

Crash

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ZerbiVane
Junior Member
6
04-05-2016, 02:20 AM
#1
I think I should replace parts until things work again. The computer is really tired, it crashed and didn’t boot from BIOS even after turning off XMP. I tried disabling XMP and it started up, but I’m not sure what the problem really is—it could be many things.
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ZerbiVane
04-05-2016, 02:20 AM #1

I think I should replace parts until things work again. The computer is really tired, it crashed and didn’t boot from BIOS even after turning off XMP. I tried disabling XMP and it started up, but I’m not sure what the problem really is—it could be many things.

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Ceu4_Ezer
Junior Member
31
04-24-2016, 01:07 PM
#2
Your processor is a 64-bit chip with a maximum speed of 3.5 GHz. You're aiming to push it beyond its current limits to achieve higher performance.
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Ceu4_Ezer
04-24-2016, 01:07 PM #2

Your processor is a 64-bit chip with a maximum speed of 3.5 GHz. You're aiming to push it beyond its current limits to achieve higher performance.

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DevilDonalt
Junior Member
13
04-25-2016, 04:53 AM
#3
I didn’t do anything, just let the system run overnight. When I woke up, it showed a crash screen. The only way to get it to boot was to turn off XMP, but after that it crashed again. I removed and reinserted my RAM sticks, and now it boots both ways. This has been happening since I built the PC a few years ago. I’m wondering if my motherboard, CPU, or RAM might be faulty. It always seems to fix itself after a few hours of use.
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DevilDonalt
04-25-2016, 04:53 AM #3

I didn’t do anything, just let the system run overnight. When I woke up, it showed a crash screen. The only way to get it to boot was to turn off XMP, but after that it crashed again. I removed and reinserted my RAM sticks, and now it boots both ways. This has been happening since I built the PC a few years ago. I’m wondering if my motherboard, CPU, or RAM might be faulty. It always seems to fix itself after a few hours of use.