F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Upgrades frequently cause system failures.

Upgrades frequently cause system failures.

Upgrades frequently cause system failures.

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NL_lars
Junior Member
23
08-06-2016, 12:21 AM
#1
He has addressed most components except storage and graphics cards. Since the issue continues, I considered reformatting all his drives. If that doesn’t resolve it, I plan to test different RAM modules. I wanted to ensure the data stays safe before proceeding. The error codes indicate serious problems: memory management issues, critical process termination, kernel security failures, and a system thread exception. These suggest hardware or driver conflicts rather than simple software glitches. The specific codes point to potential failures in the file system or memory management, possibly linked to the Ntfs.sys process. It seems the problem is tied to underlying system components needing inspection.
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NL_lars
08-06-2016, 12:21 AM #1

He has addressed most components except storage and graphics cards. Since the issue continues, I considered reformatting all his drives. If that doesn’t resolve it, I plan to test different RAM modules. I wanted to ensure the data stays safe before proceeding. The error codes indicate serious problems: memory management issues, critical process termination, kernel security failures, and a system thread exception. These suggest hardware or driver conflicts rather than simple software glitches. The specific codes point to potential failures in the file system or memory management, possibly linked to the Ntfs.sys process. It seems the problem is tied to underlying system components needing inspection.

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DanielEmpire
Posting Freak
781
08-06-2016, 08:54 AM
#2
Typically the issue points to weak RAM, a faulty motherboard, CPU problems, or storage instability. Or maybe an erratic overclock. What are the specifications?
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DanielEmpire
08-06-2016, 08:54 AM #2

Typically the issue points to weak RAM, a faulty motherboard, CPU problems, or storage instability. Or maybe an erratic overclock. What are the specifications?

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Brick12331
Junior Member
1
08-14-2016, 08:29 AM
#3
A bad overclock? I am unsure if the RAM is overclocked at all. They left it to a guy to do the upgrades because I didn't have the time. Can I just reset the BIOS settings and the possible overclock goes back to default settings? And is the only way to know if it's the RAM to clear all the other things you mentioned? Motherboard: ASRock Z590 PRO4 CPU: 11th Gen Intel® Core™ i7-11700kf @ 3.60GHz RAM : G.SKILL RIPJAWS V DDR4-3600 2X16 Storage: 1 HDD, 1 SATA SSD Corsair Force LE SSD (boot drive) and 1 M.2 ssd, Samsung 980 PRO 1 TB. GPU: Inno3D iChill GTX 1070 X4 OS: Windows 10 Thank you!
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Brick12331
08-14-2016, 08:29 AM #3

A bad overclock? I am unsure if the RAM is overclocked at all. They left it to a guy to do the upgrades because I didn't have the time. Can I just reset the BIOS settings and the possible overclock goes back to default settings? And is the only way to know if it's the RAM to clear all the other things you mentioned? Motherboard: ASRock Z590 PRO4 CPU: 11th Gen Intel® Core™ i7-11700kf @ 3.60GHz RAM : G.SKILL RIPJAWS V DDR4-3600 2X16 Storage: 1 HDD, 1 SATA SSD Corsair Force LE SSD (boot drive) and 1 M.2 ssd, Samsung 980 PRO 1 TB. GPU: Inno3D iChill GTX 1070 X4 OS: Windows 10 Thank you!

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asdno2
Member
193
08-15-2016, 01:38 PM
#4
Check for a BIOS upgrade for the motherboard, if one exists.
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asdno2
08-15-2016, 01:38 PM #4

Check for a BIOS upgrade for the motherboard, if one exists.

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Adralym
Junior Member
30
08-15-2016, 04:19 PM
#5
Added two new RAM modules, it looks like the previous ones were the issue. The computer no longer crashes and Memtest64 no longer reports errors, so it’s likely the fix was complete. Appreciate the assistance!
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Adralym
08-15-2016, 04:19 PM #5

Added two new RAM modules, it looks like the previous ones were the issue. The computer no longer crashes and Memtest64 no longer reports errors, so it’s likely the fix was complete. Appreciate the assistance!