- Joined
- 27 Mar 2020
- Posts
- 48
Not yet. Thanks for reminding me. Will do that after these stress tests.Have you installed the Chipset drivers?
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Not yet. Thanks for reminding me. Will do that after these stress tests.Have you installed the Chipset drivers?
Will double check after stress tests. Thanks.The BIOS you have looks pretty recent to me. If there's a BIOS date as well, that would confirm, as the version numbers don't quite match those on the website.
Thanks, much appreciated. These tests are going much better now. Would crash around 4mins 30 in previously, now been running for 10 mins plus and all good.Grab the latest ones from here. Could well be whats causing your crashes.
https://www.amd.com/en/support/chipsets/amd-socket-am4/b450
Will double check after stress tests. Thanks.
Really appreciate the help. Thanks!Two othe
I've done a bit of digging- there's only one newer version, and it's a Beta, so you're basically up to date.
Maybe some settings need tweaking, but if you're running, that's a start.
ThisHave you installed the Chipset drivers?
Have already memtested but no errors.
Thanks. I’ll be honest, I’ve got no idea what I’m doing with Linux. Is there any other way I can test the SSD for faults?Yes, you should be concerned, that isn't normal behaviour. If you can't have the system running normally without restricting the clock speed, or limiting it in any other way there is a fault.
Try running a live USB, like Linux Mint etc to see if that behaves when the system is set up 'normally' and if not you've ruled out the SSD, and the O/S install. It sounds very RAM/PSU, with an outside chance of it being the motherboard.
Thanks. I’ll be honest, I’ve got no idea what I’m doing with Linux. Is there any other way I can test the SSD for faults?
I’ve already tested the RAM and it seems fine. I suppose it could be PSU, but again how do I test that?
I’ll try and watch a few videos and give it a go. The problem is these crashes seem not to happen very often, so I might not be able to get it to crash with Linux.Well this is the crux of the problem when you are building machine without spare parts and tools to test with, if you find a faulty part it is hard to locate it and verify you've found the issue.
I'd normally offer to look at it if you live local, as I am happy to help other forum users out, but you'd not be able to come in due to virus restrictions still in place.
I don't think you really need any experience with linux at all, since Mint works just like Windows on the surface. All you do is create a bootable USB stick, and it will run the O/S from that, you can then connect to your network and download Prime95 etc. then run it.
Have tried to use CrystalDiskInfo and CrystalDiskMark and all seems okay.Well this is the crux of the problem when you are building machine without spare parts and tools to test with, if you find a faulty part it is hard to locate it and verify you've found the issue.
I'd normally offer to look at it if you live local, as I am happy to help other forum users out, but you'd not be able to come in due to virus restrictions still in place.
I don't think you really need any experience with linux at all, since Mint works just like Windows on the surface. All you do is create a bootable USB stick, and it will run the O/S from that, you can then connect to your network and download Prime95 etc. then run it.
I was thinking the same. I have memtested the RAM though and it came back fine.I sounds like motherboard, PSU, potentially RAM. If new SSD it is very rarely a problem.
Don’t know if you had formatted and reinstalled windows. If the system was not stable at the time of Install it will always be problematic.
anyway it is not common to have multiple components broken as they are all new parts.
something isn’t right. If you got a spare PSU you can certainly test it to rule out PSU issue.
if SMART info is not giving you anything on the SSD then it is highly unlikely the SSD is at fault.
I would focus on RAM, CPU and Motherboard.
with ram you can test individual sticks at a time running single channel and also different dim slots.