Question BSOD when using 2 RAM sticks

Jul 3, 2022
3
0
10
Hi, I'm Kaox. Before I start, I want to apologize if my English is not perfect as it is not my native language. Ever since I bought the pc, I've been getting BSOD's in a row. The ram I had at that time was an adata xpg 3000mhz 8gb. I tried this ram on a friend's pc and it works perfectly. In my pc I put a 8gb 2666mhz patriot ram and there weren't bsods. The pc started to work fine, so I bought another one of the same model to be able to have 16gb. After 6 months, the bsods came back. Both rams work perfectly individually in any slot on the motherboard, and the bsod only appears if I use both at the same time, and they appear lot of times in a day or once a week, once two weeks. Thank you very much.


This is what the dump file says:

Debugging Details:
------------------


KEY_VALUES_STRING: 1

Key : Analysis.CPU.mSec
Value: 6468

Key : Analysis.DebugAnalysisManager
Value: Create

Key : Analysis.Elapsed.mSec
Value: 6413

Key : Analysis.Init.CPU.mSec
Value: 3577

Key : Analysis.Init.Elapsed.mSec
Value: 22437

Key : Analysis.Memory.CommitPeak.Mb
Value: 86

Key : WER.OS.Branch
Value: vb_release

Key : WER.OS.Timestamp
Value: 2019-12-06T14:06:00Z

Key : WER.OS.Version
Value: 10.0.19041.1


FILE_IN_CAB: MEMORY.DMP

BUGCHECK_CODE: 109

BUGCHECK_P1: a39ff960d4a8d70a

BUGCHECK_P2: b3b705e727271f62

BUGCHECK_P3: fffff8060ae41cc8

BUGCHECK_P4: 0

MEMORY_CORRUPTOR: ONE_BIT

BLACKBOXBSD: 1 (!blackboxbsd)


BLACKBOXNTFS: 1 (!blackboxntfs)


BLACKBOXPNP: 1 (!blackboxpnp)


BLACKBOXWINLOGON: 1

PROCESS_NAME: csrss.exe

STACK_TEXT:
ffffdb0b144bed28 0000000000000000 : 0000000000000109 a39ff960d4a8d70a b3b705e727271f62 fffff8060ae41cc8 : nt!KeBugCheckEx


SYMBOL_NAME: nt!_xmm+1618

MODULE_NAME: nt

IMAGE_NAME: ntkrnlmp.exe

STACK_COMMAND: .cxr; .ecxr ; kb

FAILURE_BUCKET_ID: MEMORY_CORRUPTION_ONE_BIT

OS_VERSION: 10.0.19041.1

BUILDLAB_STR: vb_release

OSPLATFORM_TYPE: x64

OSNAME: Windows 10

FAILURE_ID_HASH: {e3faf315-c3d0-81db-819a-6c43d23c63a7}

Followup: MachineOwner
---------



My OS:
Microsoft Windows 10 Pro
Version: Microsoft Windows 10 Pro
BuildNumber: 19044
OSArchitecture: 64-bit
 
Hi, I'm Kaox. Before I start, I want to apologize if my English is not perfect as it is not my native language. Ever since I bought the pc, I've been getting BSOD's in a row. The ram I had at that time was an adata xpg 3000mhz 8gb. I tried this ram on a friend's pc and it works perfectly. In my pc I put a 8gb 2666mhz patriot ram and there weren't bsods. The pc started to work fine, so I bought another one of the same model to be able to have 16gb. After 6 months, the bsods came back. Both rams work perfectly individually in any slot on the motherboard, and the bsod only appears if I use both at the same time, and they appear lot of times in a day or once a week, once two weeks. Thank you very much.


This is what the dump file says:

Debugging Details:
------------------


KEY_VALUES_STRING: 1

Key : Analysis.CPU.mSec
Value: 6468

Key : Analysis.DebugAnalysisManager
Value: Create

Key : Analysis.Elapsed.mSec
Value: 6413

Key : Analysis.Init.CPU.mSec
Value: 3577

Key : Analysis.Init.Elapsed.mSec
Value: 22437

Key : Analysis.Memory.CommitPeak.Mb
Value: 86

Key : WER.OS.Branch
Value: vb_release

Key : WER.OS.Timestamp
Value: 2019-12-06T14:06:00Z

Key : WER.OS.Version
Value: 10.0.19041.1


FILE_IN_CAB: MEMORY.DMP

BUGCHECK_CODE: 109

BUGCHECK_P1: a39ff960d4a8d70a

BUGCHECK_P2: b3b705e727271f62

BUGCHECK_P3: fffff8060ae41cc8

BUGCHECK_P4: 0

MEMORY_CORRUPTOR: ONE_BIT

BLACKBOXBSD: 1 (!blackboxbsd)


BLACKBOXNTFS: 1 (!blackboxntfs)


BLACKBOXPNP: 1 (!blackboxpnp)


BLACKBOXWINLOGON: 1

PROCESS_NAME: csrss.exe

STACK_TEXT:
ffffdb0b144bed28 0000000000000000 : 0000000000000109 a39ff960d4a8d70a b3b705e727271f62 fffff8060ae41cc8 : nt!KeBugCheckEx


SYMBOL_NAME: nt!_xmm+1618

MODULE_NAME: nt

IMAGE_NAME: ntkrnlmp.exe

STACK_COMMAND: .cxr; .ecxr ; kb

FAILURE_BUCKET_ID: MEMORY_CORRUPTION_ONE_BIT

OS_VERSION: 10.0.19041.1

BUILDLAB_STR: vb_release

OSPLATFORM_TYPE: x64

OSNAME: Windows 10

FAILURE_ID_HASH: {e3faf315-c3d0-81db-819a-6c43d23c63a7}

Followup: MachineOwner
---------



My OS:
Microsoft Windows 10 Pro
Version: Microsoft Windows 10 Pro
BuildNumber: 19044
OSArchitecture: 64-bit
Update the bios if available.
Test.

Buying 2 separate sticks of the same ram can be iffy.
Best to buy a kit of 2 sticks then you have a matched pair.
 
The BIOS is at its latest update and the 2 ram sticks are exactly the same model
That does not mean anything if bought separately they could come from different batches and be slightly different.

Which is why it's best to buy a kit those sticks are matched.

If your bios allows it I suppose you could fuss with ram voltages and timing and see if you can find a sweet spot.
 
first confirm your bios setting for your command rate for your memory.
18-20-20-42 (2T)
it should be set to 2T or 2N most bios will default to 1T or 1N .
you might need to 2 clock cycle command rate it the motherboard is fully populated.

if the setting is wrong you will get single bit corruptions at a low rate. memtest86 should find some failures but not always in the same spot.
 
Jul 3, 2022
3
0
10
first confirm your bios setting for your command rate for your memory.
18-20-20-42 (2T)
it should be set to 2T or 2N most bios will default to 1T or 1N .
you might need to 2 clock cycle command rate it the motherboard is fully populated.

if the setting is wrong you will get single bit corruptions at a low rate. memtest86 should find some failures but not always in the same spot.

Hi. How do I do that?
I don't understand "
first confirm your bios setting for your command rate for your memory.
18-20-20-42 (2T)"
 
Hi. How do I do that?
I don't understand "
first confirm your bios setting for your command rate for your memory.
18-20-20-42 (2T)"
Hi. How do I do that?
I don't understand "
first confirm your bios setting for your command rate for your memory.
18-20-20-42 (2T)"
you would have to go into bios and look at the settings for your memory.
assuming your system lets you set them.
generally command rate is the 5th entry for the memory timing

you should look in the manual for your motherboard since each one can be different