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Hammer Row Failure after BSOD

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  • Hammer Row Failure after BSOD

    Here's my output report for my 32gb RAM on Windows 7. My assumption is that after numerous BSODs while running video and several Chrome tabs open that I have some faulty memory. Does this indicate the same to you?

    Thanks for a great piece of software!

    Summary

    Report Date 2015-10-13 08:04:19
    Generated by MemTest86 V6.2.0 Free (64-bit)
    Result FAIL

    System Information

    EFI Specifications 2.31
    CPU Type Intel Core i7-3770K @ 3.50GHz
    CPU Clock 3510 MHz [Turbo: 3911.5 MHz]
    # Logical Processors 8
    L1 Cache 4 x 64K (100645 MB/s)
    L2 Cache 4 x 256K (53514 MB/s)
    L3 Cache 8192K (33042 MB/s)
    Memory 32815M (19515 MB/s)
    DIMM Slot #0 8GB DDR3 XMP PC3-12800
    / BLS8G3D1609DS1S00.
    9-9-9-24 / 800 MHz / 1.500V
    DIMM Slot #1 8GB DDR3 XMP PC3-12800
    / BLS8G3D1609DS1S00.
    9-9-9-24 / 800 MHz / 1.500V
    DIMM Slot #2 8GB DDR3 XMP PC3-12800
    / BLS8G3D1609DS1S00.
    9-9-9-24 / 800 MHz / 1.500V
    DIMM Slot #3 8GB DDR3 XMP PC3-12800
    / BLS8G3D1609DS1S00.
    9-9-9-24 / 800 MHz / 1.500V

    Result summary

    Test Start Time 2015-10-12 17:58:57
    Elapsed Time 14:00:33
    Memory Range Tested 0x0 - 81F000000 (33264MB)
    CPU Selection Mode Single: CPU # 0
    # Tests Passed 22/23 (95%)
    Lowest Error Address 0x3E6851C4 (998MB)
    Highest Error Address 0x7B20C7658 (31520MB)
    Bits in Error Mask 00000000000006A2
    Bits in Error 5
    Max Contiguous Errors 1
    Test # Tests Passed Errors
    Test 0 [Address test, walking ones, 1 CPU] 2/2 (100%) 0
    Test 1 [Address test, own address, 1 CPU] 2/2 (100%) 0
    Test 2 [Address test, own address] 2/2 (100%) 0
    Test 3 [Moving inversions, ones & zeroes] 2/2 (100%) 0
    Test 4 [Moving inversions, 8-bit pattern] 2/2 (100%) 0
    Test 5 [Moving inversions, random pattern] 2/2 (100%) 0
    Test 6 [Block move, 64-byte blocks] 2/2 (100%) 0
    Test 7 [Moving inversions, 32-bit pattern] 2/2 (100%) 0
    Test 8 [Random number sequence] 2/2 (100%) 0
    Test 9 [Modulo 20, ones & zeros] 2/2 (100%) 0
    Test 10 [Bit fade test, 2 patterns, 1 CPU] 2/2 (100%) 0
    Test 13 [Hammer test] 0/1 (0%) 8
    Last 10 Errors
    [Data Error] Test: 13, CPU: 0, Address: AC18540C, Expected: FFFFFFFF, Actual: FFFFFBFF
    [Data Error] Test: 13, CPU: 0, Address: 7B20C7658, Expected: 00000000, Actual: 00000080
    [Data Error] Test: 13, CPU: 0, Address: 44F4C65C8, Expected: 00000000, Actual: 00000002
    [Data Error] Test: 13, CPU: 0, Address: 2AD0852EC, Expected: 00000000, Actual: 00000020
    [Data Error] Test: 13, CPU: 0, Address: 3E6851C4, Expected: 00000000, Actual: 00000200
    [Data Error] Test: 13, CPU: 0, Address: AC18540C, Expected: FFFFFFFF, Actual: FFFFFBFF
    [Data Error] Test: 13, CPU: 0, Address: 7B20C7658, Expected: 00000000, Actual: 00000080
    [Data Error] Test: 13, CPU: 0, Address: 2AD0852EC, Expected: 00000000, Actual: 00000020

    Certification

    This document certifies that the Tests described above have been carried out by a suitably qualified technician on the System described above.

  • #2
    Failures in Test 13 do indicate faulty RAM but it may or may not be directly causing your BSOD issues. See this page for details about errors detected in Test 13.

    I would try swapping the modules for known good RAM to see if you still experience the BSOD. This would determine whether or not memory is the culprit.

    Comment


    • #3
      Thanks Keith,

      After further QA with the PC, I found out that there was a corrupted driver as well as another set of failures in the RAM, so I recovered the C drive and have new RAM coming today.

      Comment

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