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New Ryzen PC Crashes Regularly (1-4 hours) - One of 5+ Different BSODS

InternetDirigible

My build is about 2 months old (not all parts are new), it worked perfectly for the first month and a half and for the last few weeks has been constantly crashing. When it crashes it typically quickly loops the last sound that was playing and makes a sort of buzzing noise.

 

My Specs are an

AsRock B550 Extreme4 (Brand New)
Ryzen 5 3600 (Brand New)

G.Skill Tridentz RGB 3600Mhz 32g kit (Brand New) (slots 2 & 4)

Sapphire RX 580 (not new)

EVGA 750 G2 (not new)

More info about storage drives in the msinfo32 dump

 

Windows 10 x64 Oct 2020 (installed fresh in december)

 

Dumps are in the attached zip but the message on the BSOD is often different than the last time. IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL happens a lot.

 

I'm using the stock cooler but temps have never gone above 70. What I do on the computer seems to not have a very strong effect on when it crashes. I had the ram at a 3600 xmp profile, I've moved it down to base speed but it hasn't made a difference. I work in IT support but know very little about DDR4 XMP, overclocking, or modern ryzen processor specifics. I've tried updating every driving I can think of, repairing windows in all the various ways I know how, and I'm somewhat out of ideas. I assumed it was software / drivers since it worked so well at first but it could be a RAM problem?

 

I won't be able to test any solutions for 6 hours or so but I appreciate any suggestions anyone has.

 

I've attached the dump as specified in the BSOD post, but the perfmon thing wouldn't finish.

 

SysnativeFileCollectionApp.zip

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I'd definitely start with MEMtest and see if you get any errors. All your dump files point to ntoskrnl.exe which basically means severe system instability, and in my experience, is typically from hardware.

Primary Gaming Rig:

Ryzen 5 5600 CPU, Gigabyte B450 I AORUS PRO WIFI mITX motherboard, PNY XLR8 16GB (2x8GB) DDR4-3200 CL16 RAM, Mushkin PILOT 500GB SSD (boot), Corsair Force 3 480GB SSD (games), XFX RX 5700 8GB GPU, Fractal Design Node 202 HTPC Case, Corsair SF 450 W 80+ Gold SFX PSU, Windows 11 Pro, Dell S2719DGF 27.0" 2560x1440 155 Hz Monitor, Corsair K68 RGB Wired Gaming Keyboard (MX Brown), Logitech G900 CHAOS SPECTRUM Wireless Mouse, Logitech G533 Headset

 

HTPC/Gaming Rig:

Ryzen 7 3700X CPU, ASRock B450M Pro4 mATX Motherboard, ADATA XPG GAMMIX D20 16GB (2x8GB) DDR4-3200 CL16 RAM, Mushkin PILOT 1TB SSD (boot), 2x Seagate BarraCuda 1 TB 3.5" HDD (data), Seagate BarraCuda 4 TB 3.5" HDD (DVR), PowerColor RX VEGA 56 8GB GPU, Fractal Design Node 804 mATX Case, Cooler Master MasterWatt 550 W 80+ Bronze Semi-modular ATX PSU, Silverstone SST-SOB02 Blu-Ray Writer, Windows 11 Pro, Logitech K400 Plus Keyboard, Corsair K63 Lapboard Combo (MX Red w/Blue LED), Logitech G603 Wireless Mouse, Kingston HyperX Cloud Stinger Headset, HAUPPAUGE WinTV-quadHD TV Tuner, Samsung 65RU9000 TV

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2 hours ago, Kid.Lazer said:

I'd definitely start with MEMtest and see if you get any errors. All your dump files point to ntoskrnl.exe which basically means severe system instability, and in my experience, is typically from hardware.

Windows memory diagnostic didn't detect any errors. Is memtest86 still worth running?

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1 hour ago, BiotechBen said:

I have never had luck with XMP working well... 

probably depends on some factors, but it always worked really well for me... set and forget basically. 

 

 

6 minutes ago, InternetDirigible said:

 

Windows memory diagnostic didn't detect any errors. Is memtest86 still worth running?

yeah memtest can find stuff that Windows doesn't (and vice versa I guess) 

 

Personally I don't think this is a hw issue, most BSODs are driver related anyway memtest is a really good idea to exclude that possibility. 

 

Otherwise if I were you, I'd DDU and fresh install some older known to be working drivers. 

 

 

Also bios and chipset updates can actually fix issues like that. 

So that would be a good idea also. 

 

 

 

The direction tells you... the direction

-Scott Manley, 2021

 

Softwares used:

Corsair Link (Anime Edition) 

MSI Afterburner 

OpenRGB

Lively Wallpaper 

OBS Studio

Shutter Encoder

Avidemux

FSResizer

Audacity 

VLC

WMP

GIMP

HWiNFO64

Paint

3D Paint

GitHub Desktop 

Superposition 

Prime95

Aida64

GPUZ

CPUZ

Generic Logviewer

 

 

 

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I would still run memtest as it is more comprehensive. My preferred testing method is to run a single, full-length test with CPU selection set to "parallel." It can cause false positives, but if it is able to complete with no errors, you KNOW your RAM is A-OK. Plus, the test goes much faster. If it encounters errors, back off to the default CPU selection of "Round Robin" and try again.

Primary Gaming Rig:

Ryzen 5 5600 CPU, Gigabyte B450 I AORUS PRO WIFI mITX motherboard, PNY XLR8 16GB (2x8GB) DDR4-3200 CL16 RAM, Mushkin PILOT 500GB SSD (boot), Corsair Force 3 480GB SSD (games), XFX RX 5700 8GB GPU, Fractal Design Node 202 HTPC Case, Corsair SF 450 W 80+ Gold SFX PSU, Windows 11 Pro, Dell S2719DGF 27.0" 2560x1440 155 Hz Monitor, Corsair K68 RGB Wired Gaming Keyboard (MX Brown), Logitech G900 CHAOS SPECTRUM Wireless Mouse, Logitech G533 Headset

 

HTPC/Gaming Rig:

Ryzen 7 3700X CPU, ASRock B450M Pro4 mATX Motherboard, ADATA XPG GAMMIX D20 16GB (2x8GB) DDR4-3200 CL16 RAM, Mushkin PILOT 1TB SSD (boot), 2x Seagate BarraCuda 1 TB 3.5" HDD (data), Seagate BarraCuda 4 TB 3.5" HDD (DVR), PowerColor RX VEGA 56 8GB GPU, Fractal Design Node 804 mATX Case, Cooler Master MasterWatt 550 W 80+ Bronze Semi-modular ATX PSU, Silverstone SST-SOB02 Blu-Ray Writer, Windows 11 Pro, Logitech K400 Plus Keyboard, Corsair K63 Lapboard Combo (MX Red w/Blue LED), Logitech G603 Wireless Mouse, Kingston HyperX Cloud Stinger Headset, HAUPPAUGE WinTV-quadHD TV Tuner, Samsung 65RU9000 TV

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3 hours ago, Kid.Lazer said:

I would still run memtest as it is more comprehensive. My preferred testing method is to run a single, full-length test with CPU selection set to "parallel." It can cause false positives, but if it is able to complete with no errors, you KNOW your RAM is A-OK. Plus, the test goes much faster. If it encounters errors, back off to the default CPU selection of "Round Robin" and try again.

I've had dead RAM before that memtest said was functioning perfectly..... Frankly I don't trust the baked in windows diagnostic tools very much. Seen it with a completely shot graphics card say that it was in perfect working order (display was Christmas tree-ing with magenta and green)

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