Re: Having build problems.
Sounds like a dry solder point on the mobo somewhere.
Re: Having build problems.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
shaithis
Sounds like a dry solder point on the mobo somewhere.
Sorry for being dense, but what would that do exactly? Is it something that i could look out for and then mention in a covering letter for an RMA?
I'm going to try his CPU/RAM/HDD in my build (to the left) and see if everything is still fine. It's annoying that i can't confirm its the board exactly due to the intermittent nature of the issue.
Re: Having build problems.
I seem to think also it maybe an issue with the soldering on the motherboard.
Re: Having build problems.
Very hard to spot a dry solder joint.....when people repair them they normally re-flow the entire board or area of the board.
The other possible thing would be a short on the back of the motherboard if a stand-off isn't aligned with a screw hole.....or the outside possibility that you have used washers on all the mobo screws stopping any ground return.
Re: Having build problems.
I would look to find a test that it repeatedly fails as to show the problem if you are looking to return the beast.
My first port of call would be the HDD; It seems to run okay except when you restart etc and you're losing files. Can you run a disc checker or boot from a USB and then run diagnostics? No dodgy bios settings I presume.
Prime may be worth while if you're checking memory too.
Re: Having build problems.
Terbinator.. 2 things mate
ONE: download MemTest, burn it to a CD and boot from it. It runs in Linux, tests the ram and is worth doing. One stick or memory that's unhappy and you will never find the randomness of the problems. I have never used Excelram.. but it's worth knowing if it's dodgy.
SECOND: if the rams ok and the cpu is ok... then just get a new board and reinstall from new.
MSI uATX boards are cheap, and assuiming I have the right socket here
http://www.scan.co.uk/products/msi-h...oard-micro-atx
is £35 not worth it to get a proper job, done and dusted?
Re: Having build problems.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Zak33
Terbinator.. 2 things mate
ONE: download MemTest, burn it to a CD and boot from it. It runs in Linux, tests the ram and is worth doing. One stick or memory that's unhappy and you will never find the randomness of the problems. I have never used Excelram.. but it's worth knowing if it's dodgy.
SECOND: if the rams ok and the cpu is ok... then just get a new board and reinstall from new.
MSI uATX boards are cheap, and assuiming I have the right socket here
http://www.scan.co.uk/products/msi-h...oard-micro-atx
is £35 not worth it to get a proper job, done and dusted?
Memtest comes back all fine, if you can't/don't want to see the thread on Aria here is Memtest results:
http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m9...4hfo1_1280.jpg
Now you can see my issue. One of the BSOD's claims a RAM issue, Memtest says its all good (as does windows own memory diagnostic thing). I don't really want to buy another board, move everything over and then get the same issues as it still leaves the CPU/HDD open to issue. Not only that, the various errors don't seem to be able to be forced on. As per my OP, originally i had tonnes of issues getting Windows to install, drivers would corrupt the installation and just plain weird behaviour - which led me to believe its motherboard/HDD related, mainly the former, as the HDD was fine in a previous build.
Re: Having build problems.
Update:
HDD isn't showing up under the 'Health' tab in HDTune but is under the error scan - which it passes 100%. It doesn't show up in SeaTools either, but the drive is there under Computer showing the partitions etc. When i ran SeaTools in my brothers PC it passed SMART but hung on the Long Generic and required a reboot. It wouldn't be so bad if the drive did fail SeaTools as its in warranty until March. As it stands, i can't get the drive to fail SeaTools and get an error code to send it off. :censored:
So it seems HDD and/or the motherboard are at fault, although that was my initial thoughts anyway :(
Re: Having build problems.
Hey, i know i'm new to the Fourms and all but i'm gonna throw in my two cents.
I wouldn't trust that Your ram is 100% OK based off of that Memtest result. I think you should re-run the test on each of your 4GB DIMMs individually, as from my experience memtest86 is not 100% accurate when working on multiple DIMMS.
Re: Having build problems.
Be aware with memtest, running just one pass, doesn't mean its good, as you can see by my shot, this is what happened when I let it run into its second pass.
http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y17...n/DSC00304.jpg
Re: Having build problems.
Hi there,
On my latest build (Asrock AM3), I had very similar problems to you. memory passed memtest, etc etc. but I had random stability issues. To cut a long story short, I was using generic memory (Ultimem, if I remember right), that seemed to be working fine. It was 1333 (666) Ram, anyway, I turned it down to 1066 (533), and my problems vanished. I've since got some branded (Corsair) RAM, that runs fine at the proper speed.
It's a long shot, but try turning your RAM down in BIOS and see what that does to stability. My cheapo Ultimem RAM runs fine in other computers - that particular motherboard just had some compatibility issue when running the RAM at full whack.
Cheers.