F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop The warning about high-frequency row hammer bit flips in Memtest is a potential concern.

The warning about high-frequency row hammer bit flips in Memtest is a potential concern.

The warning about high-frequency row hammer bit flips in Memtest is a potential concern.

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bear7001
Senior Member
448
04-17-2016, 07:02 AM
#1
Hey everyone, I just purchased a used DDR3 Kingston RAM from eBay for my old PC. It was the HYPER X FURY HX318C10FRK2/16 (2X8 GB) DDR3-1866 CL10 model. My 8GB RAM was limiting performance, so I upgraded it. I ran a memtest at the clock speed and everything checked out fine. However, there’s a warning about possible high-frequency row bit flips. Is this a big issue? I’m thinking about returning it and buying something else if it’s worth it. Any advice would be appreciated!
B
bear7001
04-17-2016, 07:02 AM #1

Hey everyone, I just purchased a used DDR3 Kingston RAM from eBay for my old PC. It was the HYPER X FURY HX318C10FRK2/16 (2X8 GB) DDR3-1866 CL10 model. My 8GB RAM was limiting performance, so I upgraded it. I ran a memtest at the clock speed and everything checked out fine. However, there’s a warning about possible high-frequency row bit flips. Is this a big issue? I’m thinking about returning it and buying something else if it’s worth it. Any advice would be appreciated!

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Argora
Junior Member
37
04-21-2016, 11:19 PM
#2
The initial scan of Memtest runs at the highest speed, while the subsequent check occurs at a slower pace. This setup ensures that under typical conditions your RAM performs adequately, as the warning indicates it failed the first test but succeeded the second.
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Argora
04-21-2016, 11:19 PM #2

The initial scan of Memtest runs at the highest speed, while the subsequent check occurs at a slower pace. This setup ensures that under typical conditions your RAM performs adequately, as the warning indicates it failed the first test but succeeded the second.

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MrKryp
Senior Member
643
04-22-2016, 12:14 AM
#3
Could you explore additional methods to evaluate them?
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MrKryp
04-22-2016, 12:14 AM #3

Could you explore additional methods to evaluate them?