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I need some help and I will take any recommendations. I have test almost every part in a different build and they worked fine. Except the motherboard and CPU, there is no way for me to test them. I have reinstalled windows 3 times with multiple hard drives. The CPU idles at 45-50 degrees, and sometimes it takes me multiple times to even boot up the computer. I'll press the power button and it will just give me a black screen and once I do get into the computer I rarely can get to the desktop with out a blue screen.

PARTS: https://pcpartpicker.com/user/H_DAW/saved/#view=KqrtJx

PLEASE HELP

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https://linustechtips.com/topic/898523-different-bsod-error-every-time/
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Try memtest86 first to rule out if there is an issue with your RAM. My PC did what you described and I found out that it was the RAM.

 

Download it here: https://www.memtest86.com/download.htm

 

If it picks up anything, even a single error, your RAM is most likely the cause. It picked up thousands of errors in only 30 minutes when I tested it on my machine with the faulty RAM.

PC:

AMD Ryzen 9 5900X | AMD Radeon RX 7900 GRE | 32 GB RAM | Arch Linux

Laptop:

MacBook Pro 13" (2019) | Intel Core i5 8279U | 8 GB RAM | macOS

Server:

Intel Core i7 6700K | 16 GB RAM | 2 TB HDD | Debian Linux

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7 minutes ago, Positive7 said:

What is the blue screen message?

 

20 minutes ago, Husky said:

Try memtest86 first to rule out if there is an issue with your RAM. My PC did what you described and I found out that it was the RAM.

 

Download it here: https://www.memtest86.com/download.htm

 

If it picks up anything, even a single error, your RAM is most likely the cause. It picked up thousands of errors in only 30 minutes when I tested it on my machine with the faulty RAM.

I tried that I got zero errors.

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Windows reliability monitor : win key -> type : View reliability history

Windows Event Viewer : win key -> type : Event Viewer

or

 

Click Control Panel.

Click System and Maintenance.

Click Administrative Tools.

Double-click on Event Viewer.

 

Look inside Windows Logs -> System and look for error and Critical level issues

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4 minutes ago, Positive7 said:

Windows reliability monitor : win key -> type : Windows reliability monitor

Windows Event Viewer : win key -> type : Event Viewer

or

 

Click Control Panel.

Click System and Maintenance.

Click Administrative Tools.

Double-click on Event Viewer.

 

Look inside Windows Logs -> System and look for error and Critical level issues

Ok I'll try that when I get home

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