F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop This was my initial PC setup and kept crashing with BSODs.

This was my initial PC setup and kept crashing with BSODs.

This was my initial PC setup and kept crashing with BSODs.

W
Wilson1
Member
178
01-24-2016, 12:09 PM
#1
W
Wilson1
01-24-2016, 12:09 PM #1

M
mayan12345
Member
207
01-27-2016, 07:49 PM
#2
Experiencing RAM-related blue screen errors? Open BIOS, disable XMP/DOCP settings, and configure RAM to 5600MT/s. Check if the problem resolves.
M
mayan12345
01-27-2016, 07:49 PM #2

Experiencing RAM-related blue screen errors? Open BIOS, disable XMP/DOCP settings, and configure RAM to 5600MT/s. Check if the problem resolves.

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_STroKX_
Junior Member
4
02-06-2016, 05:58 PM
#3
Check the cause of the problems with XMP settings. If needed, consider swapping out the RAM modules.
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_STroKX_
02-06-2016, 05:58 PM #3

Check the cause of the problems with XMP settings. If needed, consider swapping out the RAM modules.

Z
zLeoZiin
Senior Member
503
02-06-2016, 11:40 PM
#4
The ram speed is definitely right. 6400 seems way too high for the CPU. AMD only promises up to 5200 for this chip. Beyond that you're in luck. You don't have to swap the RAM, just adjust the speed. It might work just fine at 6000.
Z
zLeoZiin
02-06-2016, 11:40 PM #4

The ram speed is definitely right. 6400 seems way too high for the CPU. AMD only promises up to 5200 for this chip. Beyond that you're in luck. You don't have to swap the RAM, just adjust the speed. It might work just fine at 6000.

C
CAMOOO
Member
225
02-07-2016, 04:51 AM
#5
Disabling XMP didn't fix the issue. The BIOS indicates RAM is operating at 4800 MHz, but it's still crashing.
C
CAMOOO
02-07-2016, 04:51 AM #5

Disabling XMP didn't fix the issue. The BIOS indicates RAM is operating at 4800 MHz, but it's still crashing.

J
JustRhune
Member
199
02-07-2016, 12:28 PM
#6
Disabling XMP didn't fix the issue. The BIOS indicates RAM is operating at 4800 MHz, but it's still crashing.
J
JustRhune
02-07-2016, 12:28 PM #6

Disabling XMP didn't fix the issue. The BIOS indicates RAM is operating at 4800 MHz, but it's still crashing.

K
Killerman1834
Posting Freak
885
02-08-2016, 03:05 PM
#7
Remove the second RAM module, keeping only the one in slot A2. Check if the system still crashes. If it does, take out the first module and insert the one you removed. This helps confirm if the problem is hardware-related.
K
Killerman1834
02-08-2016, 03:05 PM #7

Remove the second RAM module, keeping only the one in slot A2. Check if the system still crashes. If it does, take out the first module and insert the one you removed. This helps confirm if the problem is hardware-related.