F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop I'm really concerned about you. What's going on?

I'm really concerned about you. What's going on?

I'm really concerned about you. What's going on?

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I
ignapro150
Junior Member
23
01-18-2026, 06:03 AM
#11
Testing it now.
I
ignapro150
01-18-2026, 06:03 AM #11

Testing it now.

B
baris070x
Junior Member
49
01-19-2026, 12:18 AM
#12
No alterations were made.
B
baris070x
01-19-2026, 12:18 AM #12

No alterations were made.

D
Deeon
Member
61
01-19-2026, 12:34 AM
#13
We started the process.
D
Deeon
01-19-2026, 12:34 AM #13

We started the process.

C
ChessMatrix
Junior Member
43
01-22-2026, 10:22 AM
#14
It seems the issue hasn't been resolved yet.
C
ChessMatrix
01-22-2026, 10:22 AM #14

It seems the issue hasn't been resolved yet.

R
Riggsock
Member
173
01-26-2026, 03:34 AM
#15
Have you checked the one stick of RAM test yet? It relies on the idea that a faulty RAM module affects only one stick. The quick and costly fix is replacing the RAM, and you can verify if that resolves the issue. Alternatively, you could run the test first to confirm it’s the actual problem.
R
Riggsock
01-26-2026, 03:34 AM #15

Have you checked the one stick of RAM test yet? It relies on the idea that a faulty RAM module affects only one stick. The quick and costly fix is replacing the RAM, and you can verify if that resolves the issue. Alternatively, you could run the test first to confirm it’s the actual problem.

D
Deven
Member
58
01-26-2026, 06:20 AM
#16
Are your BIOS settings current? Disable XMP/DOCP and test with a single RAM module. If it fails, relocate it to another port. Should that work, try the alternate stick. If stability returns, reinstall the other module in the opposite channel. If it remains stable, restore DOCP. If crashes persist, reduce the speed by one level and observe. Avoid overclocking—your controller supports up to 5200 MT/s, exceeding this risks instability. I've experienced chips that fail at any overclock beyond their limits (my wife's 5700G holds steady at 3200, but higher speeds trigger crashes). Multiple RAM combinations have proven ineffective. It seems the silicon selection is quite unpredictable.
D
Deven
01-26-2026, 06:20 AM #16

Are your BIOS settings current? Disable XMP/DOCP and test with a single RAM module. If it fails, relocate it to another port. Should that work, try the alternate stick. If stability returns, reinstall the other module in the opposite channel. If it remains stable, restore DOCP. If crashes persist, reduce the speed by one level and observe. Avoid overclocking—your controller supports up to 5200 MT/s, exceeding this risks instability. I've experienced chips that fail at any overclock beyond their limits (my wife's 5700G holds steady at 3200, but higher speeds trigger crashes). Multiple RAM combinations have proven ineffective. It seems the silicon selection is quite unpredictable.

W
WildCandy
Senior Member
675
01-26-2026, 11:00 AM
#17
My information isn't current; the latest update is 0421 while the current Asus version is 1600.
W
WildCandy
01-26-2026, 11:00 AM #17

My information isn't current; the latest update is 0421 while the current Asus version is 1600.

M
MWRH2002
Junior Member
39
01-26-2026, 07:25 PM
#18
I tested each stick individually, but nothing changed. But when the system finally started, running the diagnostic with both sticks connected revealed no hardware issues.
M
MWRH2002
01-26-2026, 07:25 PM #18

I tested each stick individually, but nothing changed. But when the system finally started, running the diagnostic with both sticks connected revealed no hardware issues.

I
136
01-28-2026, 07:27 PM
#19
Both tools functioned, yet the device remained sluggish. What's the issue? 11 or 10?
I
iIPotatoChipIi
01-28-2026, 07:27 PM #19

Both tools functioned, yet the device remained sluggish. What's the issue? 11 or 10?

D
DrBsTigger
Member
59
02-03-2026, 12:18 AM
#20
Does your board allow BIOS flashback? If yes, you can refresh the BIOS without entering UEFI settings. Asus probably provides guidance on using a USB drive to do this. I can look for the relevant webpage if you'd like, though search results may be helpful.
D
DrBsTigger
02-03-2026, 12:18 AM #20

Does your board allow BIOS flashback? If yes, you can refresh the BIOS without entering UEFI settings. Asus probably provides guidance on using a USB drive to do this. I can look for the relevant webpage if you'd like, though search results may be helpful.

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