Hey guys, I posted a while back about getting BSOD crashes/freezing during games. After a while things went back to normal (not quite sure what I did to fix it, or rather which thing I did actually fixed it) but now I'm having similar issues again and I suspect that making certain my RAM is set to the right DRAM timings would be beneficial in either fixing the issue or ruling out the RAM.
In my last post I was prompted by @thanatos73 to check my DRAM timings in case they were way off. I did get additional RAM in the not-so-distant past (another 2 x 4gb, bringing total to 16gb), but hadn't had any issues so far as I could tell. However, as RAM is something I'm not as clued up on as I am about other parts, I do need some help working out the best RAM timings for the sticks I have.
I use Speccy to monitor basic temps for my pc, and previously it had listed both sets of RAM sticks individually and gave temps for both. However, now it only lists them as "16.0GB Single-Channel DDR3 @ 799MHz (11-11-11-30)" with no temps (see image).
Now the tricky part is that both sets of RAM are set to 11-11-11-30 as their timings, and neither model's sticks have the default timings on their label on the actual sticks, and wherever I look online I get different timings listed for both models. It also doesn't help in my BIOS that I am unsure which channel is which dual-set of RAM, so even if I did know the timings for each, I'm unsure of which needs changing.
Here are my specs, including RAM models:
CPU: FX-8350
GPU: GTX 970
Mobo: MSI 990FXA-GD65
RAM: Kingston Beast (2 x 4gb), Kingston HyperX Fury (2 x 4gb). 16gb dual-channel total.
PSU: CX600M
Any help would be appreciated.
EDIT: Realised I didn't post when the crashes happened. I get these freeze/crashes during games, although they mostly seem to happen in games that involve heavy load (Battlefield 3, Middle Earth: Shadow of Mordor, Just Cause 3). It is not limited to games, unlike my previous issue a month or so back, and has frozen/crashed whilst watching shows on Netflix too (which is why I suspect RAM may be the issue). After these crashes the top of my case is very hot above where the RAM is on my mobo, and when I restart my pc Speccy shows that the mobo is the hottest temp rather than the cpu or gpu.
In my last post I was prompted by @thanatos73 to check my DRAM timings in case they were way off. I did get additional RAM in the not-so-distant past (another 2 x 4gb, bringing total to 16gb), but hadn't had any issues so far as I could tell. However, as RAM is something I'm not as clued up on as I am about other parts, I do need some help working out the best RAM timings for the sticks I have.
I use Speccy to monitor basic temps for my pc, and previously it had listed both sets of RAM sticks individually and gave temps for both. However, now it only lists them as "16.0GB Single-Channel DDR3 @ 799MHz (11-11-11-30)" with no temps (see image).
Now the tricky part is that both sets of RAM are set to 11-11-11-30 as their timings, and neither model's sticks have the default timings on their label on the actual sticks, and wherever I look online I get different timings listed for both models. It also doesn't help in my BIOS that I am unsure which channel is which dual-set of RAM, so even if I did know the timings for each, I'm unsure of which needs changing.
Here are my specs, including RAM models:
CPU: FX-8350
GPU: GTX 970
Mobo: MSI 990FXA-GD65
RAM: Kingston Beast (2 x 4gb), Kingston HyperX Fury (2 x 4gb). 16gb dual-channel total.
PSU: CX600M
Any help would be appreciated.
EDIT: Realised I didn't post when the crashes happened. I get these freeze/crashes during games, although they mostly seem to happen in games that involve heavy load (Battlefield 3, Middle Earth: Shadow of Mordor, Just Cause 3). It is not limited to games, unlike my previous issue a month or so back, and has frozen/crashed whilst watching shows on Netflix too (which is why I suspect RAM may be the issue). After these crashes the top of my case is very hot above where the RAM is on my mobo, and when I restart my pc Speccy shows that the mobo is the hottest temp rather than the cpu or gpu.