Whilst my Laptop was doing Windows Updates on Thursday night I experienced a BSOD related to "MEMORY_MANAGEMENT" (I also had one that was "SYSTEM_THREAD_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED" soon afterwards), upon looking into the potential causes of the first it was suggested that there may be a hardware RAM fault. I also had the same MEMORY_MANAGEMENT error on Saturday afternoon.
I downloaded Memtest86 v8.1 free & let it do 2 passes (out of the 4 it defaulted to) and both times it had widely different number of errors on the tests.
First pass running on 4 CPU's (Intel i7 6700k) had a total of 766 cumulative errors, most of which were Test 6 followed by Test 7, after the second pass the number of errors was up to 3220. Almost half of which were on Test 6 (1573).
I decided to run Test 6 alone for 1 pass (on 4CPU's) and it produced a different number of errors, ran tests 5-7 again with 4 CPU's on 1 pass and it had 361 errors, ran test 6 only on 1 CPU with 1 pass and it produced 300 errors. Each "error" is only one Bit being flipped, so for an example a 2 at the end of the data becomes an F when read back.
And after running Memtest86 last night I also had "BAD_SYSTEM_CONFIG_INFO" which suggested that the SYSTEM Registry Hive was either corrupt (unlikely according to MS) or the memory image of it was Corrupt, further suggesting a RAM issue.
I recently upgraded from 32GB of Samsung 2133MHz M471A2K43BB1-CPB (two 16GB Modules) but I wanted 64GB of RAM but was unable to find anywhere to purchase the same RAM from without it costing a ridiculous amount, so I decided to purchase 64GB of Kingston HyperX 2400MHz HX424S14IB/16 for about the same cost as 32GB of the Samsung RAM imported from another country. Note that when I purchased the Kingston RAM it was cheaper to purchase them as 4 individual modules rather than a specific "64GB Kit", all 4 modules were manufactured in Week 3 of 2019.
My Laptop is an XMG U716 which is based on the Clevo P775DM1(-G), it has an Intel i7-6700k (using the 100 series chipset I believe) and a GTX980 8GB with a Samsung 951 NVME drive for Windows 10. The CPU is slightly overclocked to 4.3GHz on one core and 4.2Ghz on 2+ cores, temperatures don't get ridiculous although I will admit they're warmer than I'd like but this is a desktop CPU in a Laptop, but memtest86 reported a Maximum CPU temp of 71C. The BIOS doesn't give me an option to change the speed without modifying all the timings manually (I could change the ratio down from 9 to 8 but ideally I'd like to have the proper timings for that rather than leaving them at 14-14-14-35 etc), the default DIMM Profile is apparently 2400MHz and XMP1 is exactly the same.
Can anyone explain why I seem to be getting different numbers of errors when running the same tests on the same RAM? Surely if this was a RAM issue then the results would always be the same? But if it was a Memory controller issue then more than one bit would be flipped and it would affect all RAM, not just two sticks (judging from the lowest & highest memory addresses being above 32768MB and below 65536MB)?
Also will the Pro version let me save a list of ALL the errors that occur rather than just the last 10? That way I could compare the tests to see if the errors appear in the same addresses.
I downloaded Memtest86 v8.1 free & let it do 2 passes (out of the 4 it defaulted to) and both times it had widely different number of errors on the tests.
First pass running on 4 CPU's (Intel i7 6700k) had a total of 766 cumulative errors, most of which were Test 6 followed by Test 7, after the second pass the number of errors was up to 3220. Almost half of which were on Test 6 (1573).
I decided to run Test 6 alone for 1 pass (on 4CPU's) and it produced a different number of errors, ran tests 5-7 again with 4 CPU's on 1 pass and it had 361 errors, ran test 6 only on 1 CPU with 1 pass and it produced 300 errors. Each "error" is only one Bit being flipped, so for an example a 2 at the end of the data becomes an F when read back.
And after running Memtest86 last night I also had "BAD_SYSTEM_CONFIG_INFO" which suggested that the SYSTEM Registry Hive was either corrupt (unlikely according to MS) or the memory image of it was Corrupt, further suggesting a RAM issue.
I recently upgraded from 32GB of Samsung 2133MHz M471A2K43BB1-CPB (two 16GB Modules) but I wanted 64GB of RAM but was unable to find anywhere to purchase the same RAM from without it costing a ridiculous amount, so I decided to purchase 64GB of Kingston HyperX 2400MHz HX424S14IB/16 for about the same cost as 32GB of the Samsung RAM imported from another country. Note that when I purchased the Kingston RAM it was cheaper to purchase them as 4 individual modules rather than a specific "64GB Kit", all 4 modules were manufactured in Week 3 of 2019.
My Laptop is an XMG U716 which is based on the Clevo P775DM1(-G), it has an Intel i7-6700k (using the 100 series chipset I believe) and a GTX980 8GB with a Samsung 951 NVME drive for Windows 10. The CPU is slightly overclocked to 4.3GHz on one core and 4.2Ghz on 2+ cores, temperatures don't get ridiculous although I will admit they're warmer than I'd like but this is a desktop CPU in a Laptop, but memtest86 reported a Maximum CPU temp of 71C. The BIOS doesn't give me an option to change the speed without modifying all the timings manually (I could change the ratio down from 9 to 8 but ideally I'd like to have the proper timings for that rather than leaving them at 14-14-14-35 etc), the default DIMM Profile is apparently 2400MHz and XMP1 is exactly the same.
Can anyone explain why I seem to be getting different numbers of errors when running the same tests on the same RAM? Surely if this was a RAM issue then the results would always be the same? But if it was a Memory controller issue then more than one bit would be flipped and it would affect all RAM, not just two sticks (judging from the lowest & highest memory addresses being above 32768MB and below 65536MB)?
Also will the Pro version let me save a list of ALL the errors that occur rather than just the last 10? That way I could compare the tests to see if the errors appear in the same addresses.
Comment