MemTest86 results: 10000+ errors


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MemTest rarely gives failures or errors on stock RAM unless there is a hardware issue, like the RAM is physically bad (bad SPD hub maybe or bad chips) or some issue elsewhere like in the CPU's IMC or the motherboard, at least that's what I've found from my experience.

Remove, clean, and re-seat the ram one stick at a time to see if the same result persists. If it passes, then try two together.

Also, this article may help: https://www.memtest86.com/troubleshooting.htm

Yes, as Hellowalkman says, try running each stick separately. Coiuld be one particular stick.

Also, If you have any spare RAM, try that, too. Just to check out your board isn't the problem.

  On 11/12/2023 at 02:45, Mockingbird said:

A different set of memory gives the same errors.

PC won't post when switching memory slots from A2 and B2 to A1 and B1.

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There is only one culprit left— the motherboard. 

  On 11/12/2023 at 02:59, adrynalyne said:

There is only one culprit left— the motherboard. 

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After a CMOS reset, it now ran memtest86 for 30 minutes without any error.

Before, it would throw errors almost immediately.

Still, a long way to go.

  On 11/12/2023 at 03:11, Mockingbird said:

After a CMOS reset, it now ran memtest86 for 30 minutes without any error.

Before, it would throw errors almost immediately.

Still, a long way to go.

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It was an overclock that went wrong..

  On 11/12/2023 at 04:30, Mockingbird said:

The PC was not overclocked at all.

EXPO/XMP off

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Since you aren’t offering anything but tidbits of info, answer just one thing directly please: Was the bios set to defaults? If the answer is yes, then I still wouldn’t trust the motherboard or at the very least the bios version since it clearly trained the ram wrong. CMOS resets shouldn’t be needed for something like this unless you had set incompatible bios settings (more than likely in the form of an overclock).

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  On 11/12/2023 at 09:36, adrynalyne said:

Since you aren’t offering anything but tidbits of info, answer just one thing directly please: Was the bios set to defaults? If the answer is yes, then I still wouldn’t trust the motherboard or at the very least the bios version since it clearly trained the ram wrong. CMOS resets shouldn’t be needed for something like this unless you had set incompatible bios settings (more than likely in the form of an overclock).

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Yes. The BIOS wasn't touched at all.

  On 11/12/2023 at 15:08, Mockingbird said:

Anyway, after the CMOS reset, Memtest86 now shows a PASS with the new set of memory.

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Just to be a bit more sure, I recommend trying HCI Memtest and y-Cruncher (single-threaded All in RAM test). I have found that these work very well in detecting unstable RAM.

  On 11/12/2023 at 09:36, adrynalyne said:

Since you aren’t offering anything but tidbits of info, answer just one thing directly please: Was the bios set to defaults? If the answer is yes, then I still wouldn’t trust the motherboard or at the very least the bios version since it clearly trained the ram wrong. CMOS resets shouldn’t be needed for something like this unless you had set incompatible bios settings (more than likely in the form of an overclock).

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You are right about that.

A BIOS update appears to have resolved (or at least alleviated) the problem.

  On 13/12/2023 at 02:52, Mockingbird said:

You are right about that.

A BIOS update appears to have resolved (or at least alleviated) the problem.

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You never mentioned you did a BIOS update.. :hmmm:

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  On 13/12/2023 at 04:41, Raa said:

Yup, that literally makes all the difference. A pretty big omission by the OP... 🤦‍♂️

 

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It’s a very weird discussion. Is he testing us?

  On 13/12/2023 at 04:41, Raa said:

Yup, that literally makes all the difference. A pretty big omission by the OP... 🤦‍♂️

 

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The BIOS update was only performed afterward.

After the CMOS reset, the PC passed Memtest86, but the crashing issue persists.

A BIOS update was later performed, which resolved the crashing issue (at least so far).

Edited by Mockingbird
  On 13/12/2023 at 03:36, Mindovermaster said:

You never mentioned you did a BIOS update.. :hmmm:

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The BIOS update was only performed afterward.

After the CMOS reset, the PC passed Memtest86, but the crashing issue persists.

A BIOS update was later performed, which resolved the crashing issue (at least so far).

Edited by Mockingbird

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