Question AMD AM4 new B550 mobo and 5700 CPU black screen and BIOS update doesn’t work

Feb 4, 2025
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Hello all,

I am at a complete lost. Spent hours on this and have been worried.

So I upgraded my mobo and cpu to a ASUS ROG Strix B550-A mobo and Ryzen 7 5700x3D. Seated everything in and turned on and all fans were running and RGB lights on my GPU bracket and AIO are on but mobo lights were off but the screen was black and orange DRAM light on mobo was blinking.

Looked it up and it was bad RAM or BIOS update needed for AM4 5000 series. I went and got my BIOS update on my flash, renamed it and put it in the root directory of the flash drive.

PC is off and plugged into BIOS port and used the BIOS flashback feature. Light turns green the. After 3-5 minutes it turns off, turn my PC on and same thing. I tried re-seating my RAM, took my GPU out, re-seated my CPU, nothing works. Sometimes when re-seating RAM my orange DRAM light and red CPU light on mobo would blink back and forth.

Maybe bad CPU? Idk… please help I feel defeated. Please let me know if any additional info is needed.

Specs:
AMD Ryzen 7 5700X3D
ASUS ROG Strix B550-A
Corsair H100i RGB Platinum SE
Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro DDR4 32 GB 4x8 3200 CL16
GeForce RTX 3080 Ti
EVGA SuperNOVA 1000 G3 80+ Gold

Video and pic:
View: https://imgur.com/a/zQA2oS2
 
Just a suggestion remove the CMOS motherboard battery to default the board settings for a few minutes and reinstall it . Try booting the board to see if it will post.
 
On boot you may need to account for memory training as well which can take a while. You have 4 sticks of ram as well. Are these 2 separate 2 x 8gb pairs? I assume you didn't buy a 4x8 kit? Even the same model numbers can be mismatched and cause issues in some occasions.

See if the clearing of the CMOS helps but patience can be the key here. If you still encounter issues then I would remove 2 of the sticks initially to try and get it to boot keeping the sticks in A2 and B2. If you still encounter issues go to just 1 stick.

Remember if you remove or swap modules around then you may have to wait for memory retraining to run again on boot
 
On boot you may need to account for memory training as well which can take a while. You have 4 sticks of ram as well. Are these 2 separate 2 x 8gb pairs? I assume you didn't buy a 4x8 kit? Even the same model numbers can be mismatched and cause issues in some occasions.

See if the clearing of the CMOS helps but patience can be the key here. If you still encounter issues then I would remove 2 of the sticks initially to try and get it to boot keeping the sticks in A2 and B2. If you still encounter issues go to just 1 stick.

Remember if you remove or swap modules around then you may have to wait for memory retraining to run again on boot
They are 2 sets of 2x8. I’ll try the A2/B2 configuration and single stick but I was messing around with the RAM all day. How long does memory retraining take? I don’t see any output to my monitors. I turn it on and the monitor knows to turn on but the output is nothing.
 
They are 2 sets of 2x8. I’ll try the A2/B2 configuration and single stick but I was messing around with the RAM all day. How long does memory retraining take? I don’t see any output to my monitors. I turn it on and the monitor knows to turn on but the output is nothing.
It can vary but if it is over 5 mins then I expect that something else is the culprit. 4 sticks can be an issue for some systems in general. Is this RAM new or has it been carried over from a previous system? Have you ever had these modules running together?

When things like this occur taking it back to basics is the first step as you have a few things going on - new system, BIOS update etc.

Reset the cmos as suggested which will take everything back to defaults in the bios. This should be the case with an upgrade anyway but clearing the cmos is always a good thing to start with.

I would actually just run 1 stick of ram to start with and see if you can get the system to post. You can add the second stick and then potentially the second set from there. Make sure that you are adding in matched pairs in case you have mixed them up.

If you do not get a post with 1 stick of memory then I would consider having a look at your cpu install to ensure that there are no bent pins or any debris on the socket.

Don't panic at this stage as still a few things to check and some ryzen systems can be a bit temperamental with memory initially.
 
It can vary but if it is over 5 mins then I expect that something else is the culprit. 4 sticks can be an issue for some systems in general. Is this RAM new or has it been carried over from a previous system? Have you ever had these modules running together?

When things like this occur taking it back to basics is the first step as you have a few things going on - new system, BIOS update etc.

Reset the cmos as suggested which will take everything back to defaults in the bios. This should be the case with an upgrade anyway but clearing the cmos is always a good thing to start with.

I would actually just run 1 stick of ram to start with and see if you can get the system to post. You can add the second stick and then potentially the second set from there. Make sure that you are adding in matched pairs in case you have mixed them up.

If you do not get a post with 1 stick of memory then I would consider having a look at your cpu install to ensure that there are no bent pins or any debris on the socket.

Don't panic at this stage as still a few things to check and some ryzen systems can be a bit temperamental with memory initially.
I do need to see which ram sticks pair because I definitely mixed it up. Everything except the mobo and cpu has been carried over. Worth mentioning that the cpu is supposedly new but the mobo is used. I will try and check these things tomorrow as I’m pretty exhausted at the moment. Thank you for taking the time to type this out for me.
 
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I do need to see which ram sticks pair because I definitely mixed it up. Everything except the mobo and cpu has been carried over. Worth mentioning that the cpu is supposedly new but the mobo is used. I will try and check these things tomorrow as I’m pretty exhausted at the moment. Thank you for taking the time to type this out for me.
No worries. Sometimes best to take a breather and return.

The RAM should be easy to identify by looking at the serial numbers on the side of the sticks. Matched pairs normally have sequential numbers on them from my experience so that should be easier to resolve.

You mention the motherboard is used and that the cpu is 'supposedly' new. Where did you buy these from? Was it Ebay or something other site. Just covering off worst case scenario is all