Memory Crashing after Upgrading

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I've been running 16GB on my 2nd machine for a while and was getting near the memory limit. It's a B350M Bazooka running a 2700x and 2 sticks of 8GB CMK16GX4M2B3000C15 Corsair RAM

I found a decent set of DDR4 ram on OverClockers https://www.overclockers.co.uk/b-gr...x8gb-ddr4-pc4-25600c16-3200mhz-bg-01t-tg.html

TLZGD416G3200HC16CDC01, 3200MHz RAM Speed, CAS 16-20-20-38 Timings, 1.25-1.35v VDIMM, Ideal for AMD Ryzen 3000/4000 and Intel Comet Lake, Lifetime Warranty with OcUK.

So I tried to add that in, Windows reported it as 32GB and after using it for 30 minutes it crashed. I tweaked with XMP to try and put them all on same mhz etc, nothing was stable and I put XMP to Auto which is defaulting it now to 2133mhz.

After 2-3 hours it crashed again with all 4 sticks in, so to test the new sticks properly I took out my 2 Corsair sticks that were solid and no crashing and left in the TeamGroup ram, it was better but crashed after about 12 hours with no XMP on.

I guess the sticks are faulty or my motherboard is just being too picky? Not sure what to do from here, ultimately I just want 32GB and not too concerned about speed, would rather have the stability.
 
SOC voltage to 1.1V is a good shout.

To test the RAM:

Run a single DIMM of the Team Group pair.

Get it to fail fast using Memtest86+: https://www.memtest.org/ | You can create a bootable USB using its installer.

Switch the DIMM if it's good and try the other. Then try the pair together. Finally, add in the other pair.

If Memtest86+ fails during the configurations, you know what change causes the instability.

I would highly recommend using Memtest86+ as you can corrupt your OS install with RAM instability. That could turn into another headache on top of this one.
 
If it still crashes with the 2 new sticks, they're likely to be just faulty.

Are you using a later BIOS? I'd expect there to be updates on memory compatibility over the years, since you have a 1st gen board.

I'm not sure what a 2700X is capable of, but I suspect it won't run 4 sticks at XMP speeds much beyond 3000.
 
Rather than running two different kits of memory with different speeds and timings you should have bought a pair of 16Gb sticks to replace what you already had. Wasn't the Ryzen 2000 series picky with memory speed and amount of sticks?
 
Rather than running two different kits of memory with different speeds and timings you should have bought a pair of 16Gb sticks to replace what you already had. Wasn't the Ryzen 2000 series picky with memory speed and amount of sticks?
Agreed, best to have same memory set to avoid conflicts
 
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