As the subject states, I'm running into problems with my current rig - during test #8, I'm getting thousands of errors on each of the modules in the two kits I purchased. (2x CMK16GX4M2A2666C16)
I've tried testing the modules one by one, in both JEDEC 2133MHz and XMP 2666MHz modes - still showing the same results during the same test.
Running the modules on a Gigabyte GA-Z170X-Gaming 7 (alongside a 6700K), with the newest BIOS (F5) in UEFI mode without CSM support, booting Memtest in UEFI mode as well, of course. Haven't tried the legacy BIOS mode of Memtest (yet).
Anyone recognize this issue, is it a false positive? (I highly doubt 4 out of the 4 modules are actually defective, the probability for that is likely *very* low. Faulty CPU/Memory controller also seems very unlikely, especially since I haven't noticed any stability issues at all, so far. Well, except for the BIOS resetting the frequency back to 2133MHz after having enabled XMP (2666MHz) - has happened during reboots twice, no crashes or errors shown anywhere though.) Windows (10 Pro) is booting up as normal, haven't seen any stability issues yet. (I have basically only installed the OS though.) But I want to make sure all the components are A OK before I start using the PC in my daily life.
(UPDATED) Just ran the Windows Memory Diagnostic tool (mdsched.exe) - no errors found, but it gets stuck on 21% when running the extended test (always 21%, the program itself doesn't crash though, and it isn't showing any errors - tried leaving it on for 6+ hours, and still no progress beyond 21%) so I have absolutely no idea what is actually causing this.
Hope someone has any insight into this!
/Chris
I've tried testing the modules one by one, in both JEDEC 2133MHz and XMP 2666MHz modes - still showing the same results during the same test.
Running the modules on a Gigabyte GA-Z170X-Gaming 7 (alongside a 6700K), with the newest BIOS (F5) in UEFI mode without CSM support, booting Memtest in UEFI mode as well, of course. Haven't tried the legacy BIOS mode of Memtest (yet).
Anyone recognize this issue, is it a false positive? (I highly doubt 4 out of the 4 modules are actually defective, the probability for that is likely *very* low. Faulty CPU/Memory controller also seems very unlikely, especially since I haven't noticed any stability issues at all, so far. Well, except for the BIOS resetting the frequency back to 2133MHz after having enabled XMP (2666MHz) - has happened during reboots twice, no crashes or errors shown anywhere though.) Windows (10 Pro) is booting up as normal, haven't seen any stability issues yet. (I have basically only installed the OS though.) But I want to make sure all the components are A OK before I start using the PC in my daily life.
(UPDATED) Just ran the Windows Memory Diagnostic tool (mdsched.exe) - no errors found, but it gets stuck on 21% when running the extended test (always 21%, the program itself doesn't crash though, and it isn't showing any errors - tried leaving it on for 6+ hours, and still no progress beyond 21%) so I have absolutely no idea what is actually causing this.
Hope someone has any insight into this!
/Chris
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