F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Questionproblem with crashing

Questionproblem with crashing

Questionproblem with crashing

C
CaptainTr0ll
Member
99
10-08-2025, 07:42 PM
#1
recently i have had a really bed spell of tecnical issues with my pc everything from psu dying to gpu developing a over heating problem and hard drive faliure but my most recent issue is my pc partialy frezing
can move mouse click on open programs canot close any and unable to shutdown/restart with out fliping the power switch i have done all i can with out buying new parts
my system:
Device Name; The-Infuriator
motherbored: msi b450 gaming plus max
Processor; AMD Ryzen 7 5800X 8-Core Processor 3.80 GHz
Installed RAM; 32.0 GB kingston fury beast 3400 Mhz (xmp turned on in bios)
Storage; 932 GB SSD CT1000BX500SSD1, 466 GB SSD WDS500G3XHC-00SJG0 (boot drive), 7.28 TB HDD TOSHIBA MG10ADA800E, 2.73 TB HDD TOSHIBA HDWD130, 447 GB SSD KINGSTON SA400S37480G
Graphics Card; NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti (8 GB) (new)
psu; 850W Corsair RMx Series RM850x (new)
System Type windows 10 pro 64-bit operating system, x64-based processor
i have reseated both my nvme and my cpu cleaning the conections with contact cleaner and repasted my cpu with artic mx-6 cup barly passes 85c
i have scaned my hardrive for both bad sectors and read and write speeds all is good
i have run stress tests on cpu and whilst it is underpreforming it oly looks to be age related and only slight and seamed stable
updated bios to the latest version
i have looked in event viwer and dont see anything other than when i swiched power off
i dont know what to do anymore im worried my cpu could be on its way out but it seams stable when testing and the nvme drive is still well within its expected life span and showing clear from issues
C
CaptainTr0ll
10-08-2025, 07:42 PM #1

recently i have had a really bed spell of tecnical issues with my pc everything from psu dying to gpu developing a over heating problem and hard drive faliure but my most recent issue is my pc partialy frezing
can move mouse click on open programs canot close any and unable to shutdown/restart with out fliping the power switch i have done all i can with out buying new parts
my system:
Device Name; The-Infuriator
motherbored: msi b450 gaming plus max
Processor; AMD Ryzen 7 5800X 8-Core Processor 3.80 GHz
Installed RAM; 32.0 GB kingston fury beast 3400 Mhz (xmp turned on in bios)
Storage; 932 GB SSD CT1000BX500SSD1, 466 GB SSD WDS500G3XHC-00SJG0 (boot drive), 7.28 TB HDD TOSHIBA MG10ADA800E, 2.73 TB HDD TOSHIBA HDWD130, 447 GB SSD KINGSTON SA400S37480G
Graphics Card; NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti (8 GB) (new)
psu; 850W Corsair RMx Series RM850x (new)
System Type windows 10 pro 64-bit operating system, x64-based processor
i have reseated both my nvme and my cpu cleaning the conections with contact cleaner and repasted my cpu with artic mx-6 cup barly passes 85c
i have scaned my hardrive for both bad sectors and read and write speeds all is good
i have run stress tests on cpu and whilst it is underpreforming it oly looks to be age related and only slight and seamed stable
updated bios to the latest version
i have looked in event viwer and dont see anything other than when i swiched power off
i dont know what to do anymore im worried my cpu could be on its way out but it seams stable when testing and the nvme drive is still well within its expected life span and showing clear from issues

N
NaiROolF
Senior Member
685
10-08-2025, 07:42 PM
#2
motherbored: msi b450 gaming plus max
Checking BIOS version on your motherboard.
Storage details: 932 GB SSD CT1000BX500SSD1, 466 GB SSD WDS500G3XHC-00SJG0 (boot drive), 7.28 TB HDD TOSHIBA MG10ADA800E, 2.73 TB HDD TOSHIBA HDWD130, 447 GB SSD KINGSTON SA400S37480G
Using Crucial's Storage Executive Manager and WD's Dashboard, verify if any firmware updates are available.
psu dying
+
psu; 850W Corsair RMx Series RM850x (new)
If the new PSU is installed, identify the previous PSU's make, model, and age. It’s likely your older unit was removed.
You didn’t specify the case model or fan orientation.
N
NaiROolF
10-08-2025, 07:42 PM #2

motherbored: msi b450 gaming plus max
Checking BIOS version on your motherboard.
Storage details: 932 GB SSD CT1000BX500SSD1, 466 GB SSD WDS500G3XHC-00SJG0 (boot drive), 7.28 TB HDD TOSHIBA MG10ADA800E, 2.73 TB HDD TOSHIBA HDWD130, 447 GB SSD KINGSTON SA400S37480G
Using Crucial's Storage Executive Manager and WD's Dashboard, verify if any firmware updates are available.
psu dying
+
psu; 850W Corsair RMx Series RM850x (new)
If the new PSU is installed, identify the previous PSU's make, model, and age. It’s likely your older unit was removed.
You didn’t specify the case model or fan orientation.

S
shupshep
Member
143
10-08-2025, 07:42 PM
#3
bios is 7B86vHN and was refreshed about a week ago, yet it was still working through the update period, so don’t assume this is causing any issues. All hard drives are functioning properly, there are no errors, and everything is current. The previous PSU was a 750W Corsair CX750M, a semi-modular unit with 80PLUS Bronze. Its main power rail was connected to the PSU case via a capacitor short (which made a loud noise), but overall everything seemed fine. Just a reminder to note your case’s make and model along with fan orientation—though I’m not sure if you meant to joke, I have an MSI MAG VAMPIRIC 011C with one intake fan cooling the drives, three intake fans for extraction, plus ventilation holes on the back, and the CPU cooler has two fans blowing air in the same direction toward the back of the PC.
S
shupshep
10-08-2025, 07:42 PM #3

bios is 7B86vHN and was refreshed about a week ago, yet it was still working through the update period, so don’t assume this is causing any issues. All hard drives are functioning properly, there are no errors, and everything is current. The previous PSU was a 750W Corsair CX750M, a semi-modular unit with 80PLUS Bronze. Its main power rail was connected to the PSU case via a capacitor short (which made a loud noise), but overall everything seemed fine. Just a reminder to note your case’s make and model along with fan orientation—though I’m not sure if you meant to joke, I have an MSI MAG VAMPIRIC 011C with one intake fan cooling the drives, three intake fans for extraction, plus ventilation holes on the back, and the CPU cooler has two fans blowing air in the same direction toward the back of the PC.