Ok, thanks for helping.
PC Stuttering/Crashing
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Originally posted by ashybtwThe S/N for the 650W: 2103570608842514
Originally posted by ashybtwThe S/N for the 750W: 2303570708837053
Can you keep it simple and just provide the model name or number for us.
Few things going on there in Speccy but the foundation of any PC needs to be an adequate PSU and i suspect that this has not been the case from day one;
Originally posted by phillpower2[COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]What is the exact model name or number of both and were they both out of the box new, 650 and 750W sounds great but it is no good if the power is not clean and stable and EVGA who are a brand that I rate had the misfortune to release a 650W PSU that was so bad that it was rated as replace immediately when it was independently tested.
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Originally posted by phillpower2You could do but why not just copy/paste the model names :unsure:
[HEADING=2]EVGA 750W GT, 80 Plus Gold Supernova[/HEADING]
The 650 was the one in my pc at first then I replaced it with the 750.Comment
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Not terrible but even the 1000 and the 1300W version of the same range were only rated as – Tier B • Mid-range
Regarding Speccy, will mention them as they are list there;
RAM
16.0GB Dual-Channel DDR4 @ [COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]1064MHz (15-15-15-36)
You need to manually overclock the RAM to the max that the CPU supports which is 3200MT/s as the slow SPD speed is causing a bottleneck and throttling the CPU.
Graphics
Sceptre K25 (1920x1080@[COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]240Hz)
Sceptre E20 (1600x900@[COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]60Hz)
You should never mix refresh rates, it never works and always causes conflicts when the GPU gets confused.
Operating System
Windows 11 Home 64-bit
Computer type: Desktop
[COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]Installation Date: 12/7/2024 10:11:29 PM
Windows is shown to be a recent install and a lazy one at that, called lazy as rather than it be done properly the system has just been allowed to work using Windows own generic drivers, how it should have been done and for as to why is explained in my canned info below;
Once Windows has been clean installed you must then install first the MBs chipset drivers then the storage/SATA drivers and third the graphics drivers, the drivers can either come from a disk provided by the motherboard manufacturer or downloaded from their site and saved to a flash drive etc, this is a must and Windows should not be allowed to check for updates before it has been done as more often than not Windows installs the wrong drivers or in the incorrect order and this can cause all sorts of problems.
The reason why this procedure is so important, the chipset is what enables the MB to be able to communicate with all the hardware + are the first drivers that Windows looks for on boot.
Power Profile
Active power scheme: [COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]High performance
Change the Windows Power Plan to Balanced, Ultra and High Performance are a form of overclocking that is known to cause stability and overheating issues, the setting should only be used for gaming type notebooks that have a discrete GPU that needs the extra power.
[COLOR=rgb(44, 130, 201)]Can I ask that you do not quote every reply as we have to read the full post to make sure nothing gets missed, thanks.[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR]Comment
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Sorry for all the questions that will be asked in this post. Just trying to get to the bottom of this. As I’ve been dealing with this for 6 months now.
The only reason i disabled xmp was because i thought that was causing the crashing. Now that i know thats not the case i will go back into bios and enable it. I also might put my 32 gb of ram back in.
For the monitors should i get another 240hz to replace the 60hz?
Should i do another fresh install of windows, but this time download all drivers in the order you provided? Or could i just keep the current windows i have and just install the drivers in the order?
I will change the Power Plan to Balanced.Comment
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Originally posted by ashybtwThe only reason i disabled xmp was because i thought that was causing the crashing. Now that i know thats not the case i will go back into bios and enable it. I also might put my 32 gb of ram back in.
Originally posted by phillpower2[COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]You need to manually overclock the RAM to the max that the CPU supports which is 3200MT/s as the slow SPD speed is causing a bottleneck and throttling the CPU.
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If you want two monitors the specs must match.
I would always recommend a system be set up correctly so that would be a yes but until you have matching screens you should stick with just having the one hooked up.
Originally posted by ashybtwI just tried to enable XMP and put the ram to 3200 MT/s but when i tried to boot back up i got the recovery blue screen. So i went back into bios and set it to 3000MT/s and the voltage is at 1.350 V.Comment
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Ok I will disconnect the 60hz monitor and stick with true 240hz until I can get another 240hz monitor.
Sorry this may be frustrating for you but I don’t understand the ram bit. You told me to put the ram to 3200 MT/s so i did. Then I replied saying when I did that I got a blue recover screen, then you said that putting the ram to 3200 MT/s isn’t what you said to do. Unless I’m dumb and “manually overlocking ram” isn’t the same as enabling “XMP”. There’s a huge possibility that I’m dumb and I did the wrong thing.Comment
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You are not dumb, you are learning just like we all had to.
The reason why you were advised to manually overclock your RAM is explained in my canned information below;
The RAM is not appropriate for your CPU, AMD state here up to 3200MHz/MT/s and if you have EXPO/XMP enabled the RAM will get auto OCd past what the CPU can handle and the PC will become unstable.
Modern RAM has two speeds, SPD (serial presence detect) and XMP or similar such as EXPO, SPD is what the BIOS detects on boot which for DDR4 for example is most often 2133MHz and XMP which when enabled will set the RAM to run at the maximum speed that it is capable of.
The tested speed of your RAM is 3596MT/s which is way too fast for your CPU to handle and when you enable XMP the RAM gets auto OCd to 3596MT/s and the computer becomes unstable.
Something to keep in mind for the future, a CPU must be compatible with a MB whereas the RAM has to be compatible with both the CPU and the MB, this because a MB can be compatible with faster CPUs than the one in your list of parts and MB manufacturers often state RAM speeds that far exceed that which any compatible CPU can handle, this is misleading at the least or dishonest at worst.
For you to do now;
Disconnect the second screen.
Restart the PC so that you can enter the BIOS, restore the MBs default factory settings in the BIOS, they are sometimes listed as one of the following " factory defaults" “most stable” or on newer boards “optimized” please note that if you have both the “most stable” and the “optimized” options in the BIOS you should choose the most stable" option as in this instance the “optimized” settings are a form of overclocking that can cause instability.
Save the new settings, exit the BIOS, restart the computer, test by using the computer as you normally would, post back with an update once you have done this.
When you post back after doing all of the above can you include in your update a new Speccy url.Comment
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Sorry but why introduce something that we know nothing about, please just stick to the advised then get back to us.
Once you have a stable machine you could then consider adding the original RAM but this is something that you need to work with us on before doing so.Comment
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I restore to the default setting in bios. I chose save and exit option and was loading into windows and then a “BitLocker” blue screen popped up. I tried to type in the recovery key like the steps say on screen but when I press enter nothing happens. I’ve had this problem before and the only choice I had last time was to fresh install windows via usb.Comment
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