E
Erik Harris
Testing memory exhaustively is an incredibly slow process, so I haven't had a
chance to troubleshoot this _fully_ yet.
I'm running an A7N8X-E Deluxe with a "TwinX" pair of Corsair 512MB XMS PC4000
modules (250MHz/500DDR RAM running at 200MHz/400DDR, and with default
timings; nothing aggressive).
Has anyone ever heard of nForce2 motherboards having trouble running
error-free in dual channel mode? Or has anyone ever heard of two modules of
RAM being more error prone than one?
I just downloaded Half Life 2 from Steam, and it's crashing like crazy. I
can't play for more than a minute or two, it seems. I've had periodic
crashes before (two per month, maybe), with IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL errors,
and one with PFN_LIST_CORRUPT (WinXP BSOD errors). And the World of Warcraft
open beta was crashing on me regularly, too. Most other things work fine,
and I can usually run for quite some time with no errors. I've also found
that if I run various memory testing programs for long enough, I invariably
find an error. It's not repeatable in a given location, but I am getting
intermittent memory errors. I suspect that's the source of a lot of my
crashing problems.
So last night, I took a memory module out and ran MemTest86+. I told it to
run all tests, but unfortunately then told it to restart the test (thinking
that might be necessary to have all tests kick in), not realizing that doing
so resets the settings, and it goes back to its "quick test" (which still
takes quite awhile). This morning, I got up and checked my computer - It had
gone through the tests 14 times and found no errors (previously, I had found
errors within the first 2-3 passes using the same quick test and both RAM
modules). So I swapped out the module - putting the other module back into
its original slot, and taking the first chip out. This way, I figure I could
narrow my problem down to a bad module OR a bad slot, and then narrow it
further from there.
This time, I ran ALL tests - after 2-3 hours, it was still finishing up the
first pass (92% done or so). But so far, no errors. I'm going to keep
testing (I needed to reboot into Windows to get some information, and figured
I'd write this email while I did), but right now, it looks like NEITHER chip
is bad, and NEITHER slot is bad, but the combination is bad. Is that really
possible (or likely, for that matter)? If so, is the problem likely to be
solved by moving the modules around such that they run in single-channel
mode? Either way, is the fault with my Mobo or my RAM?
chance to troubleshoot this _fully_ yet.
I'm running an A7N8X-E Deluxe with a "TwinX" pair of Corsair 512MB XMS PC4000
modules (250MHz/500DDR RAM running at 200MHz/400DDR, and with default
timings; nothing aggressive).
Has anyone ever heard of nForce2 motherboards having trouble running
error-free in dual channel mode? Or has anyone ever heard of two modules of
RAM being more error prone than one?
I just downloaded Half Life 2 from Steam, and it's crashing like crazy. I
can't play for more than a minute or two, it seems. I've had periodic
crashes before (two per month, maybe), with IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL errors,
and one with PFN_LIST_CORRUPT (WinXP BSOD errors). And the World of Warcraft
open beta was crashing on me regularly, too. Most other things work fine,
and I can usually run for quite some time with no errors. I've also found
that if I run various memory testing programs for long enough, I invariably
find an error. It's not repeatable in a given location, but I am getting
intermittent memory errors. I suspect that's the source of a lot of my
crashing problems.
So last night, I took a memory module out and ran MemTest86+. I told it to
run all tests, but unfortunately then told it to restart the test (thinking
that might be necessary to have all tests kick in), not realizing that doing
so resets the settings, and it goes back to its "quick test" (which still
takes quite awhile). This morning, I got up and checked my computer - It had
gone through the tests 14 times and found no errors (previously, I had found
errors within the first 2-3 passes using the same quick test and both RAM
modules). So I swapped out the module - putting the other module back into
its original slot, and taking the first chip out. This way, I figure I could
narrow my problem down to a bad module OR a bad slot, and then narrow it
further from there.
This time, I ran ALL tests - after 2-3 hours, it was still finishing up the
first pass (92% done or so). But so far, no errors. I'm going to keep
testing (I needed to reboot into Windows to get some information, and figured
I'd write this email while I did), but right now, it looks like NEITHER chip
is bad, and NEITHER slot is bad, but the combination is bad. Is that really
possible (or likely, for that matter)? If so, is the problem likely to be
solved by moving the modules around such that they run in single-channel
mode? Either way, is the fault with my Mobo or my RAM?