F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Your PC is experiencing major problems following the heatsink reseat.

Your PC is experiencing major problems following the heatsink reseat.

Your PC is experiencing major problems following the heatsink reseat.

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tommie124
Member
199
09-03-2016, 03:33 AM
#1
How extended was your use of the thermal throttling CPU? Did it affect your IMC? What are your RAM speeds? Are you enabling XMP profiles? Which RAM modules are present?
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tommie124
09-03-2016, 03:33 AM #1

How extended was your use of the thermal throttling CPU? Did it affect your IMC? What are your RAM speeds? Are you enabling XMP profiles? Which RAM modules are present?

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samsampp
Member
114
09-03-2016, 06:09 AM
#2
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samsampp
09-03-2016, 06:09 AM #2

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alejandrobo1
Posting Freak
877
09-03-2016, 06:46 AM
#3
Uncertain about how long the CPU throttled. Last check was three years ago after upgrading; temperatures were normal then. RAM is 3200 DDR4 if that’s the correct speed and timing. Not sure what XMP means. The RAM is in slot 1, so I removed the other stick.
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alejandrobo1
09-03-2016, 06:46 AM #3

Uncertain about how long the CPU throttled. Last check was three years ago after upgrading; temperatures were normal then. RAM is 3200 DDR4 if that’s the correct speed and timing. Not sure what XMP means. The RAM is in slot 1, so I removed the other stick.

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905xA
Senior Member
667
09-06-2016, 12:38 AM
#4
I have four RAM slots available, but I excluded slots 1 and 3. I then tried slots 2 and 4 without success. Eventually, I removed one stick completely and placed the other in slot one, which resolved the issue. I didn’t even remove the CPU from its socket initially. To clean the thermal paste, I used isopropyl alcohol and a paper towel. I’m hesitant to reinsert the CPU just in case things get worse, but I’m prepared to do a full rebuild if necessary. Right now, it’s running with one stick, though I haven’t applied any load yet—I’m just trying to figure out what went wrong online.
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905xA
09-06-2016, 12:38 AM #4

I have four RAM slots available, but I excluded slots 1 and 3. I then tried slots 2 and 4 without success. Eventually, I removed one stick completely and placed the other in slot one, which resolved the issue. I didn’t even remove the CPU from its socket initially. To clean the thermal paste, I used isopropyl alcohol and a paper towel. I’m hesitant to reinsert the CPU just in case things get worse, but I’m prepared to do a full rebuild if necessary. Right now, it’s running with one stick, though I haven’t applied any load yet—I’m just trying to figure out what went wrong online.

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Vayneofhate79
Member
215
09-06-2016, 12:48 AM
#5
I confirmed the CMOS reset.
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Vayneofhate79
09-06-2016, 12:48 AM #5

I confirmed the CMOS reset.

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xXDinklemanXx
Member
171
09-07-2016, 07:12 PM
#6
Sure, okay. If it does reset, I pulled the motherboard battery three times to get it working again. I didn’t actually use the reset option in the BIOS.
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xXDinklemanXx
09-07-2016, 07:12 PM #6

Sure, okay. If it does reset, I pulled the motherboard battery three times to get it working again. I didn’t actually use the reset option in the BIOS.

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Rumbelz
Junior Member
11
09-07-2016, 08:20 PM
#7
We aim to remove every doubt so you understand the exact problem. If you’re aware slot 4 functions, test both sticks; if they both work, it’s likely not the RAM issue. Replacing a CPU won’t help and might make things worse. It could be that one pin isn’t connecting properly with the CPU, preventing boot. Don’t try to adjust pins—just handle them gently, inspect, and reposition. Clearing CMOS usually resets BIOS settings, but some motherboards retain certain configurations. You might also consider lowering the clock speed temporarily to check stability. Think of it as a reverse flash. A Windows update could be the solution either way. Restore to a stable point or perform a clean install if needed.
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Rumbelz
09-07-2016, 08:20 PM #7

We aim to remove every doubt so you understand the exact problem. If you’re aware slot 4 functions, test both sticks; if they both work, it’s likely not the RAM issue. Replacing a CPU won’t help and might make things worse. It could be that one pin isn’t connecting properly with the CPU, preventing boot. Don’t try to adjust pins—just handle them gently, inspect, and reposition. Clearing CMOS usually resets BIOS settings, but some motherboards retain certain configurations. You might also consider lowering the clock speed temporarily to check stability. Think of it as a reverse flash. A Windows update could be the solution either way. Restore to a stable point or perform a clean install if needed.

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jlien11
Senior Member
253
09-07-2016, 08:34 PM
#8
Thanks for your support. I plan to check if I can reboot without resetting CMOS first, since I haven’t tried powering off yet. If that works, I’ll swap the RAM and observe the results. Would it be better to clear CMOS each time or is this more about a motherboard problem?
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jlien11
09-07-2016, 08:34 PM #8

Thanks for your support. I plan to check if I can reboot without resetting CMOS first, since I haven’t tried powering off yet. If that works, I’ll swap the RAM and observe the results. Would it be better to clear CMOS each time or is this more about a motherboard problem?

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kokej8
Junior Member
49
09-08-2016, 01:18 AM
#9
Okay yeah so I just shut it down and tried to turn it back on and it’s not posting again, not getting any display. Should I try the other ram stick and clear cmos again to see if that other ram works or should I go right to reseating the cpu? UPDATE: I got it to post with the other RAM stick but I had to clear CMOS again to get it to boot. Looks like both RAM sticks are fine, but now i know that I can't turn on my PC without clearing CMOS each time. Really weird. Im gonna try both RAM sticks now and clear CMOS again to see I can boot with both sticks in. UPDATE 2: Tried to just see if I can restart normally before attempting to add the other RAM stick and it actually posted for sec before I quickly got a windows blue screen and now it won’t post anymore. Really strange. UPDATE 3: Now it’s running windows fine with both RAM sticks in it. So it’s 100% not the RAM. I just don’t understand why I can turn it on and off without clearing CMOS first.
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kokej8
09-08-2016, 01:18 AM #9

Okay yeah so I just shut it down and tried to turn it back on and it’s not posting again, not getting any display. Should I try the other ram stick and clear cmos again to see if that other ram works or should I go right to reseating the cpu? UPDATE: I got it to post with the other RAM stick but I had to clear CMOS again to get it to boot. Looks like both RAM sticks are fine, but now i know that I can't turn on my PC without clearing CMOS each time. Really weird. Im gonna try both RAM sticks now and clear CMOS again to see I can boot with both sticks in. UPDATE 2: Tried to just see if I can restart normally before attempting to add the other RAM stick and it actually posted for sec before I quickly got a windows blue screen and now it won’t post anymore. Really strange. UPDATE 3: Now it’s running windows fine with both RAM sticks in it. So it’s 100% not the RAM. I just don’t understand why I can turn it on and off without clearing CMOS first.