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Ignifyre

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  1. I fixed the issue and ran Prime95 for several hours with no rounding errors. It turned out to be the SSD that failed.
  2. Are there any log files present in your Minidump folder? The default location is usually C:\Windows\Minidump. You can look up online for how to view that, but you can also use the Event Viewer that comes with Windows. Could you paste the error from that here? There are several tools you can use to check your disc integrity, i.e.: sfc /scannow To scan for damage: DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth To perform a more comprehensive scan: DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /ScanHealth To restore damages: DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth If none of the scans show damages, I would say try finding the errors from the Event Viewer or your dump file. If the dump file from crashing doesn't exist, you can try searching for C:/Windows/MEMORY.dmp, which is the full memory dump and looking up how to make use of that. Else, you can try testing for memory or CPU issues with Prime95 or use Window's chkdsk tool. On C drive: chkdsk c: Perform full scan and repair pass: chkdsk c: /f /r /x There's also memtest86, which you can look up how to make a boot drive to test your memory. Else, if you have any spare parts, I would try replacing them to see if you have a hardware failure somewhere.
  3. Specs: MOBO: ROG Strix X570-E Gaming (Update 1405, most recent) CPU: Ryzen y 3800X PSU: EVGA SuperNOVA 750 G5, 80 Plus Gold 750W GPU: SAPPHIRE NITRO+ Radeon RX 5700 XT 100416NT+8GSR 8GB 256-Bit GDDR6 PCI Express 4.0 x16 ATX Video Card SSD: Sabrent 1TB Rocket NVMe 4.00 Gen4 PCIe M.2 Internal SSD (Has Windows 10 Boot) HDD: WD Black 4TB Performance Hard Drive - 7200 RPM, SATA 6 Gb/s, 256 MB Cache, 3.5" RAM: TEAMGROUP T-Force Xcalibur RGB DDR4 16GB (2x8GB) 3600 MHz What I have tried already: sfc /scannow chkdsk Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth Window's memory test Note: All of the above tools displayed no errors memtest86 (until 2nd passthrough, but the screen didn't seem to be updating when I got home from work after 9 hours, so I guess this failed) Updating drivers, made sure BIOS was up-to-date Unplugged the HDD to rule that out and still encountered errors Uninstalling recent programs Disabling Windows Defender Running several antivirus scans About a hundred Microsoft BSoD support pages and YouTube videos Overclocking CPU and RAM voltage and testing everything, reverting to default values and testing everything Changing the power plug location Changing the RAM slots Prime95 on Blend mode (Sometimes Prime95 crashed after 15-20 minutes, after overvolting, it crashed after 3 hours while rounding errors were displayed where the value was supposed to be under 0.4 but went to 0.48... and eventually got to 9e+15. After the 9e+15 error, I got a bunch of "NUL"s to show by viewing the log in Notepad++, which I assume is some sort of encoding used to represent an overflow value? Additionally, the total value that was supposed to be calculated was around 6 million but turned out to be 5 million). Note: HWMONITOR displayed temperatures and voltages below the maximum, so this doesn't seem to be an overheating issue. The hottest the CPU got was around 72 °C, but the temperature usually stayed somewhere in the 60s. What I think the issue is: The BSoDs that I have had have all had various errors, the most common being CRITICAL_PROCESS_DIED. I've gotten a PAGE_FAULT_IN_NONPAGED_AREA, an, UNEXPECTED_STORE_EXCEPTION (while running Prime95 I believe?), and a couple KERNEL_DATA_INPAGE_ERRORs. It seems to be pretty obvious to me that the issue is a hardware issue due to all the crashes and the Prime95 results.txt. I am not able to use any logs because the system doesn't always generate them. I had only one log generated after reinstalling Windows over my old installation, which was a Kernel Power, Error 41 issue from Window's event viewer. When I decided to do a factory reset and delete my SSD, I had an error copying all the files. I rebooted and tried again and had success. Unfortunately, while setting up Windows at the "getting things ready for you" screen, I crashed and now have a very basic installation missing some components. I can try again, but I don't think that would do much good. It seems the issue lies with the SSD, the CPU, or the RAM, but I am unable to figure out why so I came here asking for help. The one thing I do still have is the Prime95 log, which I can attach if it's of any use. I'm at my wits' end. Should I try running memteset86 again or would you guys be able to help me diagnose the error? Edit: The computer was in sleep mode but it just got another CRITICAL_PROCESS_DIED error.
  4. Just updating, I have been trying to fix some crash fixes and while in the midst of that, the DOCP settings finally detected the 3600 MHz and the computer is using the full RAM speed. I've tested the RAM in several slots, ran memory checker, did memtest, etc. I'm not sure why it's suddenly working now though... If I had to guess, I set a consistent voltage for the RAM and the CPU. This may have helped the bios find the correct speeds since now something in the system decided everything is now compatible.
  5. Dang, I'm afraid you're right; I just changed the DDRAM to a frequency of 3200 MHz and that works. Well good enough for now I guess. Thanks for being my rubber ducky.
  6. The correct amount is detected though? And I already tried setting it to 1.35v.
  7. It has gone through several reboots and then it tells me I need to run the setup again. I was wondering what that was lol.
  8. I have two TEAMGROUP T-Force Xcalibur RGB DDR4 16GB (2x8GB) 3600MHz cards. The motherboard is a ROG Strix X570-E Gaming, so it should be compatible. I followed all the advice on changing the profile to "XMP" in the bios, which is D.C.O.P. in my case. It detected the correct amount (3597 I believe?). However, when I check Task Manager I get 2400, which if it's supposed to show half like I've read at a ton of other places, it should display something around 1800? When I check CPU-Z, it does display half at around 1199.7... But this would be correct if I had DDR4 2400MHz cards. I'm confused on why the bios and these tools won't show the correct amounts. Any ideas? I'm kind of stumped right now.
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