I've been testing one computer for a couple of days now - the main components have been fine for 3 years (hard drives failed on this machine before, none recently though)
I ran a 4 separate pairs of DDR3 1600 with memtest86 overnight with many errors (occasionally the first 2 or 3 cycles through showed no errors)
With memtest86 version 4.3 and one core setup they ran with no errors
Then I tried manually picking the one test that had failed, block move (keys c, 1, 3, 6, enter, 0) and immediately upon the test's start it shows errors. Doing this multiple times occasionally freezes the system.
Error confidence is always >100 and errors show up at different locations ("lowest error address" has been as low as 3M and as high as 2100MB)
summarize: the entire suite run contiguously 8 to 12 hours produces no errors, picking only "block move" immediately produces errors.
Am I right to conclude the memory may be just fine (2 manufacturers, g.skill and corsair, and 8 sticks check out fine then produce the same errors, different locations) and either the CPU or motherboard (bios maybe?) is bad?
I'm running with no peripherals - hard drives, network cards, nothing, though the motherboard has built in audio, video & network
system: (no overclocking, BIOS defaults)
AMD Phenom II X4 945 3 gigahertz
motherboard: asrock m3A790gxh/128M
memory (all 9-9-9-24)
corsair cml16gx3m4a1600c9 (4x4GB set, tested 4@once and 2 separately) (this is the one that ran for years with no problems)
gskill f312800cl9Q-16GBZL (4x4GB set, tested 4@once and 2 separately)
edit: I forgot to ask the actual question that prompted me to register: is there anything uniquely or especially stressful about starting the "block move" test all by itself, out of sequence? This same test ran with zero failures on this same memory, and fails almost every time when I trigger it out-of-order.
I ran a 4 separate pairs of DDR3 1600 with memtest86 overnight with many errors (occasionally the first 2 or 3 cycles through showed no errors)
With memtest86 version 4.3 and one core setup they ran with no errors
Then I tried manually picking the one test that had failed, block move (keys c, 1, 3, 6, enter, 0) and immediately upon the test's start it shows errors. Doing this multiple times occasionally freezes the system.
Error confidence is always >100 and errors show up at different locations ("lowest error address" has been as low as 3M and as high as 2100MB)
summarize: the entire suite run contiguously 8 to 12 hours produces no errors, picking only "block move" immediately produces errors.
Am I right to conclude the memory may be just fine (2 manufacturers, g.skill and corsair, and 8 sticks check out fine then produce the same errors, different locations) and either the CPU or motherboard (bios maybe?) is bad?
I'm running with no peripherals - hard drives, network cards, nothing, though the motherboard has built in audio, video & network
system: (no overclocking, BIOS defaults)
AMD Phenom II X4 945 3 gigahertz
motherboard: asrock m3A790gxh/128M
memory (all 9-9-9-24)
corsair cml16gx3m4a1600c9 (4x4GB set, tested 4@once and 2 separately) (this is the one that ran for years with no problems)
gskill f312800cl9Q-16GBZL (4x4GB set, tested 4@once and 2 separately)
edit: I forgot to ask the actual question that prompted me to register: is there anything uniquely or especially stressful about starting the "block move" test all by itself, out of sequence? This same test ran with zero failures on this same memory, and fails almost every time when I trigger it out-of-order.
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