Question Nobody has been able to solve this

May 29, 2024
3
0
10
There is something that has been happening to me for months and I can't find the error.


When I'm using my PC, no matter if I'm running a game or just on the desktop
,sometimes ramdomly the monitors suddenly lost signal.Everything became unresponsive , keyboard , mouse , and the DRAM light on orange came on on the motherboard , this causes forcing me to restart the computer.

There is no certain pattern, sometimes it happens 3 times in a day, other times once, other times after 4 days, once I even went 15 days without the error.

I have changed the RAM for two new ones, and sent the first ones to RMA, in total four new RAM, still with the same error

The next thing was to change the motherboard, Asus TUF B650 Gaming , the problem persists.

The next thing was to change the CPU, the problem kept happening

My last option was to change the PSU, the problem continues

I have also changed the graphic card


I'm at a point where I don't know what to do, I don't know if anyone has encountered this type of problem.

In short, I have changed all the components under warranty and they have accepted the changes, so I deduce that they must have broken. It is a coincidence that everything has been damaged. Could something be causing the problem and short-circuiting the components?


Nvidia 4070 Ti
Asus TUF B650M
Ryzen 7600x
Nfortec Sagitta 750w
Hyperfury DDR5 5600 / T-Force DDR6 5600
Windows 11
 
And I will add the suggestion to look in Reliability History/Monitor and Event Viewer.

Either one or both tools may be capturing some error codes, warnings, or even informational events just before or at the time of the described problems.

Start with Reliability History/Monitor. Much more end user friendly and the timeline format may reveal patterns.

Event Viewer requires more time and effort to navigate and understand. To help with Event Viewer:

How To - How to use Windows 10 Event Viewer | Tom's Hardware Forum (tomshardware.com)

Both tools allow any given entry to be clicked for additional details. The details may or may not be helpful.
 
I suppose it would be the acme of foolishness to inquire whether you have switched your Windows drive just to confirm that it isn't the problem.

Perhaps you could clone the OS onto a spare drive if you have one and use it as you usually do, just to see if your main drive wasn't the issue.
 
And I will add the suggestion to look in Reliability History/Monitor and Event Viewer.

Either one or both tools may be capturing some error codes, warnings, or even informational events just before or at the time of the described problems.

Start with Reliability History/Monitor. Much more end user friendly and the timeline format may reveal patterns.

Event Viewer requires more time and effort to navigate and understand. To help with Event Viewer:

How To - How to use Windows 10 Event Viewer | Tom's Hardware Forum (tomshardware.com)

Both tools allow any given entry to be clicked for additional details. The details may or may not be helpful.
Yes but it doesnt capture the errors , only captures the Kernel error ff all the times I have to hold down the button to force restart
 
Open Reliability History/Monitor.

Expand the window so that all can be seen.

Take two screenshots: first "Weeks" and then "Days".

Post the screenshots here via imgur (www.imgur.com).

The objective being to see if there is some clue or trend that is forcing the use of the reset button.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Perla69xd