Device overheating and frequent shutdowns are occurring.
Device overheating and frequent shutdowns are occurring.
I finally logged in to my PC and saw the same errors repeating in the image. I snapped a photo before it crashed again. I need some rest and will be back tomorrow. I’ll follow up this morning. If it doesn’t work, I’ll take it to a friend who fixes computers nearby.
You can modify the Bios settings. There are two updated versions available. However, this may not fully address the problem. It could be related to your storage. Do you have an alternative drive where you can install Windows?
I question the problem isn’t related to the drive since it’s a fresh Windows setup under two months old and comes with a brand-new NVMe SSD. I plan to test my HDD using the same installation tomorrow evening and will update afterward.
I looked into this and found a recurring problem with AMD motherboard chipsets concerning SCPE CA authentication. Here are my suggestions: 1. Turn off the temporary storage in your BIOS (other forums reported success). 2. Disable XMP or overclocking—using the default settings could help. 3. Update your BIOS and install the latest drivers for your motherboard (search online for your specific model and download).
Given your crash time limit, the third option might be tough. If needed, you can wipe the drive and start fresh. It’s not ideal but sometimes necessary. I recently had to reinstall on my B550M-A because the LAN port didn’t support Gigabit Ethernet properly, and a USB 3 to Ethernet dongle worked as a workaround. Let me know what happens!
I believe the main problem came from using a low-quality silicon GPU with my CPU. I had overclocked it slightly—around 50 MHz for the core and 10 MHz for memory—but then reduced the clock speeds by about 100 MHz on the core and 30 MHz on memory. After that adjustment, everything functioned properly. I ran it through M-SPI Kumbustor for roughly 15 minutes without any freezing issues, just smooth performance. That’s quite a change! Thanks a lot for your assistance!
I agree, it could be anything. I’d start with the default factory settings, no XMP or tweaks. Adjust gradually until you find the problem. If the CPU works alone, test it separately. Then swap out the RAM and see if it helps. Finally, replace the GPU and check. If they all run but not together, it might be a motherboard or cable issue. It’s frustrating but helpful to isolate it.
I turned off the overclocking and everything else. After a while I went check my graphics card and noticed some GPU-related errors in the event timer. It seems many of the PCIe pins were corroded. My thought is that when my AC broke a week or two ago—thanks to humidity in southern Louisiana—and because the components run hotter, moisture built up over time and corroded the PCIe pins. It doesn’t look like there are other damaged spots on the motherboard, which is a positive sign.
It seems like you're asking about a problem and whether you've backed up your data or upgraded your GPU. Did you save the file or install a new GPU?