I'm here to help with your Ram problems. What do you need assistance with?
I'm here to help with your Ram problems. What do you need assistance with?
I ran the memtest for seven hours: completed successfully with no issues.
I recently tested my HyperX 16GB 3200MHz setup with a friend. Performance remains consistent—Assassin’s Creed Valhalla runs smoothly. However, when I push RAM usage near 12GB, the system freezes unpredictably. It doesn’t happen immediately; it’s sporadic. Running Gamy without Chrome tabs helps avoid crashes. Interestingly, my old RAM setup frequently crashed regardless of game demand. With the new kit, I barely noticed issues and could play for two days straight. I’m curious if memory controllers affect stability across different kits. Could handling damage occur during CPU installation? I tried it twice—first time everything seemed normal, but I noticed a slight misalignment. After removing the CPU, I double-checked the pins; they looked intact.
The memory controller isn't something you can fix alone. It usually means the motherboard is faulty or the CPU is damaged. If removing just one stick of RAM resolves the problem, the issue likely lies with the motherboard. If everything is still under warranty, you might try installing both CPU and motherboard in a single stick... or purchase a 16GB RAM module and proceed. Alternatively, consider using a LiveUSB version of Linux Mint to stress-test your system, as Linux is very sensitive to hardware issues. A crash could indicate software corruption, while a failure might point to bad hardware.
it's odd how the previous RAM kit always showed issues right away, causing crashes. after getting it back from the RNA, I can now run demanding games smoothly for hours. what do you think about testing different RAM slots—like 1 and 3 or 1 and 2? might it help? i'm exhausted from constantly removing parts. i'm certain i'll never build a PC on my own again. i've reinstalled Windows multiple times, trying both home and pro editions, so I don't think it's a software problem.
It could be bad... the worst outcome is it won’t start up, but that shouldn’t lead to lasting harm