How do I know if my ram is unstable? Btw I'm new to the PC world, so a detailed answer about instability will be appreciatedOnly if you are having stability issues, then you can bump it up .01 volts.
The ram at XMP is already running at the rated volts by the manufacturer. I've a ryzen 3 3200G which officially supports 2933MHz ram frequency. But I've enabled XMP on my Corsair vengeance rgb pro 3200MHz and the XMP set it to 1.350 volts by auto after that. Everything was working fine. Few days after that I went to the bios and the ram suddenly got back to 2133MHz. Btw the ram was still at 3200 before going to the bios. After that I again enabled XMP and since then everything is working fine and I haven't experienced any crashes or blue death screens thankfully from day 1. So is it all okay? I've only experienced that tiny issue there but no other crashes or stuffSome RAM will only run at higher speeds with slightly higher than default voltage.
Check the rated voltage of the memory you are installing and adjust accordingly.
By regular use: you'll get BSOD, stuttering, random crashes while gaming or running other apps, random restarts and sometimes your PC will fail to POST.How do I know if my ram is unstable? Btw I'm new to the PC world, so a detailed answer about instability will be appreciated
Boot from a Memtest86 USB and run it through at least one full pass.The ram at XMP is already running at the rated volts by the manufacturer. I've a ryzen 3 3200G which officially supports 2933MHz ram frequency. But I've enabled XMP on my Corsair vengeance rgb pro 3200MHz and the XMP set it to 1.350 volts by auto after that. Everything was working fine. Few days after that I went to the bios and the ram suddenly got back to 2133MHz. Btw the ram was still at 3200 before going to the bios. After that I again enabled XMP and since then everything is working fine and I haven't experienced any crashes or blue death screens thankfully from day 1. So is it all okay? I've only experienced that tiny issue there but no other crashes or stuff
Is it to test if my memory is stable or not?Boot from a Memtest86 USB and run it through at least one full pass.
Thanks dude. Btw I've another question.If your computer crashes a lot basically, yes.
Had my first crash in seemingly years just yesterday. Definitely too much stuff open and I hadn't rebooted in a while.
Is it because I've the off timer turned on?Probably just a sleep/wake problem on the monitor detecting a signal or not. Fairly common with a lot of monitors really, particularly with display port.
Probably just a sleep/wake problem on the monitor detecting a signal or not. Fairly common with a lot of monitors really, particularly with display port.
Yes that's a built in monitor feature. I'll look into this issue by turning off the "off timer" now and thanks for the helpCould very well be if that is a built in monitor feature. If it is the Windows timer you are talking about, generally no. Monitor should go into standby mode when the computer is off or has idled for a significant time, then it should wake up at any input to the computer that wakes it.