I just built a new desktop based on:
AMD Ryzen Thredripper 2950X processor
ASUS Prime X399-A motherboard,
64GB of Corsair Dominator Platinium 3000MHz DDR4 (4x 16GB modules)
My new PC froze twice when engaged in heavy processing using more than 32GB of RAM and I got worried.
Did some research and found this great piece of software called MemTest86.
I ran the test the whole night and here is what I found:
As you can see, not very encouraging results: 15 errors after 4 passes and over 10 hours of tests.
I ran the same test again and I got errors again, although not exactly the same.
Here is the summary:
So I decided to test one RAM module at the time, running only once the tests with errors (3,4,5,7,, to speed up the troubleshooting
The result was that 3 modules (out of 4) showed no errors, while the fourth gave me errors, but not not always. After running the test again, even this one came clean. Somehow confusing.
This why I decided to go for a 3rd round of tests, paring two modules together, in 32GB batches
Maybe not surprisingly, the only time I got errors was when the module I already suspected as faulty was part of the mix.
I removed the faulty module and plugged the remaining 3 (48GB in total) and ran the whole sequence again (all tests, 4 passes)
Guess what? NO errors! Yesss!
I called Amazon support and they are sending me overnight, no charges, another 32GB kit.
Will be testing again tonight, but I have a strong feeling that everything will be all right, tonight!
Thanks Memtest86!
AMD Ryzen Thredripper 2950X processor
ASUS Prime X399-A motherboard,
64GB of Corsair Dominator Platinium 3000MHz DDR4 (4x 16GB modules)
My new PC froze twice when engaged in heavy processing using more than 32GB of RAM and I got worried.
Did some research and found this great piece of software called MemTest86.
I ran the test the whole night and here is what I found:
As you can see, not very encouraging results: 15 errors after 4 passes and over 10 hours of tests.
I ran the same test again and I got errors again, although not exactly the same.
Here is the summary:
So I decided to test one RAM module at the time, running only once the tests with errors (3,4,5,7,, to speed up the troubleshooting
The result was that 3 modules (out of 4) showed no errors, while the fourth gave me errors, but not not always. After running the test again, even this one came clean. Somehow confusing.
This why I decided to go for a 3rd round of tests, paring two modules together, in 32GB batches
Maybe not surprisingly, the only time I got errors was when the module I already suspected as faulty was part of the mix.
I removed the faulty module and plugged the remaining 3 (48GB in total) and ran the whole sequence again (all tests, 4 passes)
Guess what? NO errors! Yesss!
I called Amazon support and they are sending me overnight, no charges, another 32GB kit.
Will be testing again tonight, but I have a strong feeling that everything will be all right, tonight!
Thanks Memtest86!
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