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So, I'm having this issue where my game would just crash, without any message, error or even a sound.. 

I always check event viewer and the error is always the same, 0xc000005 which is like an overall error if im right... so that doesnt help.

It always happens when gaming, and the timing is always different.. 40 minutes to 5 hours

 

I always thought that it was my RAM, but i have done a 1 hour memtest64 and there were no errors.. XMP was turned on during the test.

 

I tried: 

Reinstalling Windows

Reinstalling drivers, reverting driver versions

Setting SOC voltage starting from 1.10 to 1.15

Following multiple fixes for the 0xc000005 error that i found on the internet (nothing worked at all)

XMP off/on (noticed that if i have my RAM on 3000mhz it BSOD's, but on 2933mhz it doesn't; motherboard at fault because it doesnt support that speed on my specific RAM module)

I also couldn't find any fix for my specific issue, so this must be some random bullshit

 

 

But i haven't tried one thing, and that's closing all third-party programs in the backround.. is it even possible that that could be the cause? I always had Gainward Express Tool 2 open in my backround since its for my GPU, and I just now realized that i can just utilize all my settings if i just save it on the VGA BIOS... 

 

Are there any of you that had this experience (or similiar)? 

I'll accept anything, please help..

Thank you!

 

Edit: If you need my specs, they are on my profile.

hi, im renata bliss and am ur freestyle dance teacher

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2x8gb G.Skill Aegis (rated 3000mhz @1.35v; clocked down to default settings "2133mhz" because of instability issues)

Eeww. Hynix M-die....

 

You can try and set the memory up manually.

In the bios, check the SPD table and compare the XMP to the timings menu. If there are some that set incorrectly, manually set them to the appropriate latency that matches the SPD XMP table. 

Set the Cpu SOC to 1.1v and the memory to 1.360v. You can also disable power down mode in the timings menu, this may help stability as well. 

If they run better at 2933mhz, then run that instead of 3000. Even if you get better stability at 2667mhz, thats still a performance gain and you'd want to tighten timings to help improve the latency. 

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3 minutes ago, ShrimpBrime said:

 

Eeww. Hynix M-die....

 

You can try and set the memory up manually.

In the bios, check the SPD table and compare the XMP to the timings menu. If there are some that set incorrectly, manually set them to the appropriate latency that matches the SPD XMP table. 

Set the Cpu SOC to 1.1v and the memory to 1.360v. You can also disable power down mode in the timings menu, this may help stability as well. 

If they run better at 2933mhz, then run that instead of 3000. Even if you get better stability at 2667mhz, thats still a performance gain and you'd want to tighten timings to help improve the latency. 

I managed to make the RAM run at 2933mhz, i updated my profile.. sorry about the confusion lol, but thank you for the handy information anyways..

 

Do you have any idea how to resolve my issue? And could it be caused by any third-party programs open in the backround?

 

Thanks btw!

hi, im renata bliss and am ur freestyle dance teacher

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