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Why do crashes occur on a new computer?
I assembled the following assembly the other day:
AMD ryzen 5 2600
Asus b450m-k II
Nvidia geforce 1650
Amd Radeon performance series r7 8x2 2666
NVME SSD a-data xpg lite 120
WD blue 1tb 7200
Coolermaater mve 500w The
hardware is absolutely new.
The essence of the problem: I suffered for two days with the installation of the OS. Either it hung on the asus logo, then on the installer's greeting, at the moment when the installation was in progress, or the choice of language; just hangs, restarts after a while.
(Win10 image assembled via rufus)
Today I downloaded Bios from the site of the latest version at the moment.
Today it turned out to install Windows after getting one bar of memory.
I inserted it back - similar lags about a minute after entering the OS, sinned on the bar, moved it to another machine, it started up normally, it worked just as well.
I installed drivers on the main machine partly from the Asus website, partly using SDI. Rebooted and inserted the memory bar. I ran it through the built-in memory test (6 times) and did not reveal any errors.
The first half an hour everything was fine, then reboot, some more time passes and reboot again. I opened the system stability view, there I found a critical kernel error. But there wasn't much information in the description.
The pattern could not be identified. It either holds any load and restarts/freezes on "calm" actions, then it crashes when starting aida.
I sin on the memory slot, tell me where (and preferably how) to dig?
I'm thinking of trying to rearrange the power supply and processor (with integrated graphics) from the second machine in order to discard the video card and power supply unit.
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try replacing the entire RAM with another one and reinstalling windows from the office. site, through the media creation tool for example (through it you can quickly make a bootable USB flash drive automatically)
> Amd Radeon performance series r7
8x2 2666 Guano
memory ,
most
likely it is to blame
> partially using SDI
Memory from AMD is far from the best choice. It looks like she's the problem. From an inexpensive one - an ordinary kingston can still be used, it usually works wonderfully. And most importantly, on any assemblies
. At least for the test, you need another RAM. If the problem does not disappear, then the mother or BP
Well, it’s obvious that the matter is in memory, since everything works when the bar is removed.
To begin with, check the default parameters in the BIOS, maybe you have auto-overclocking in the BIOS, or the memory frequency is raised so that the memory is buggy. try to disable overclocking, try to manually set the memory frequency to not very high, check the match between the voltage of the bar and what is actually set in the BIOS.
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