First of all, here's what I'm working with:
CPU: AMD Phenom II X6 1090T BE
GPU: NVidia GTX 650
MB: ASRock 970M Pro3 (Firmware/UEFI version 1.30)
RAM: 2 x 8 GB Kinston HyperX Fury Black DDR3
PSU: Cooler Master V650S
HDD: Samsung 850 EVO SSD 250 GB
Case: BitFenix Prodigy M
CPU Cooler: Arctic Cooling Freezer A11
Fans: 2 x BitFenix Spectre 120 mm
OS: Windows 8.1 64-bit & Linux Mint 17.2 Cinnamon 64-bit
I was running MemTest86 6.2.0 to check my memory, since it's not officially supported for this particular motherboard. I started with a quick test with the default values in only let the test finish one pass, which it did without errors. As I was trying to pin down a problem I was experiencing with RealBench stress test, I thought I should probably run the test in parallel mode, since the stress test involves heavy multitasking. However, when I reached Test 2 the test just stopped progressing. It didn't freeze totally, mind you. The timer was still running and the icons representing CPU core activity were spinning - except for CPU1, which showed a "W" - so I thought I just needed to give the test some time. Six hours later only the time on the counter had changed. So I tried again. The second time around CPU1 started working as well, but almost immediately after that the computer just rebooted. There was no blue screen or any found memory errors that I could see, just a reboot.
I decided to run the default test on each of the separate cores to see if CPU1 was somehow anomalous. So I started from CPU0 and checked if the CPUs could get past Test 2. This is what I saw:
CPU0: OK
CPU1: Passmark freezes before anything is tested. The testing screen appears, but the timer is dead from the start and the system doesn't respond to anything from the keyboard.
CPU2: See CPU1
CPU3: OK
CPU4: See CPU1
CPU5: See CPU1
My system was at stock settings at the time and with a stock system the RealBench stress test had so far been the only thing I had had any problems with, and I had run roughly ten different benchmark tests before that. Furthermore, even with a mild OC I had passed eight hours of the standard blend test of Prime95 with six workers without any errors. I had also tried a custom version of the blend test which used all 16 GB of RAM for one hour and had encountered no errors.
After encountering this issue with MemTest86 I got a bit worried and also ran Windows Memory Diagnostic Tool. It took about 26 hours to run 4 passes of the extended test, but no errors were found. While this is no guarantee that MemTest86 wouldn't find an error, I'm beginning to wonder if this is a UEFI-related issue. I've had a bit of trouble booting to MemTest86 and for some reason it just doesn't want to start around 50% of the time. I just see a sliver of my normal UEFI background picture in the upper edge of my monitor and that's it. If this happens, a reboot and retry has so far been all that it has taken to get MemTest to run.
Any ideas?
CPU: AMD Phenom II X6 1090T BE
GPU: NVidia GTX 650
MB: ASRock 970M Pro3 (Firmware/UEFI version 1.30)
RAM: 2 x 8 GB Kinston HyperX Fury Black DDR3
PSU: Cooler Master V650S
HDD: Samsung 850 EVO SSD 250 GB
Case: BitFenix Prodigy M
CPU Cooler: Arctic Cooling Freezer A11
Fans: 2 x BitFenix Spectre 120 mm
OS: Windows 8.1 64-bit & Linux Mint 17.2 Cinnamon 64-bit
I was running MemTest86 6.2.0 to check my memory, since it's not officially supported for this particular motherboard. I started with a quick test with the default values in only let the test finish one pass, which it did without errors. As I was trying to pin down a problem I was experiencing with RealBench stress test, I thought I should probably run the test in parallel mode, since the stress test involves heavy multitasking. However, when I reached Test 2 the test just stopped progressing. It didn't freeze totally, mind you. The timer was still running and the icons representing CPU core activity were spinning - except for CPU1, which showed a "W" - so I thought I just needed to give the test some time. Six hours later only the time on the counter had changed. So I tried again. The second time around CPU1 started working as well, but almost immediately after that the computer just rebooted. There was no blue screen or any found memory errors that I could see, just a reboot.
I decided to run the default test on each of the separate cores to see if CPU1 was somehow anomalous. So I started from CPU0 and checked if the CPUs could get past Test 2. This is what I saw:
CPU0: OK
CPU1: Passmark freezes before anything is tested. The testing screen appears, but the timer is dead from the start and the system doesn't respond to anything from the keyboard.
CPU2: See CPU1
CPU3: OK
CPU4: See CPU1
CPU5: See CPU1
My system was at stock settings at the time and with a stock system the RealBench stress test had so far been the only thing I had had any problems with, and I had run roughly ten different benchmark tests before that. Furthermore, even with a mild OC I had passed eight hours of the standard blend test of Prime95 with six workers without any errors. I had also tried a custom version of the blend test which used all 16 GB of RAM for one hour and had encountered no errors.
After encountering this issue with MemTest86 I got a bit worried and also ran Windows Memory Diagnostic Tool. It took about 26 hours to run 4 passes of the extended test, but no errors were found. While this is no guarantee that MemTest86 wouldn't find an error, I'm beginning to wonder if this is a UEFI-related issue. I've had a bit of trouble booting to MemTest86 and for some reason it just doesn't want to start around 50% of the time. I just see a sliver of my normal UEFI background picture in the upper edge of my monitor and that's it. If this happens, a reboot and retry has so far been all that it has taken to get MemTest to run.
Any ideas?
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