the problem has not been solved I do not understand the truth but I have been looking for there and I saw someone who had the same thing but with different specifications … I do not know if it will be the same problem that I have but it seems to me that apparently I configure something of the bios and it is fixed to him it is possible that I have to do the same ¿?
The link to the problem is here http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/answers/id-2711109/system-crash-gaming-requires-hard-reset-day.html
a copy of the supposed solution
BEST ANSWER
furkandegerJul 10, 2015, 11:51 PM
rubix_1011 said:
I’m running out of ideas, as well. Given that you’ve encountered this primarily when you’ve overclocked, it could indicate a power supply or motherboard with failing power delivery, but you’ve also encountered it when not overclocking…which could still indicate the same, but I would expect consistencies in some form if that were the case.
MemTest86+ is pretty quick to sort out if you have a bad stick, so you shouldn’t have to run for hours, but it is the most complete when you run it that long. Usually it will find a bad stick within a few minutes. Did you MemTest on all your DIMM slots on the motherboard, as well? I’ve seen motherboards that have bad DIMM slots but the RAM sticks were all good.
Guys, I cannot thank you enough for your support during this period.
I think I can finally confirm that I solved my issue.
Of all the things I tried, I rolled back whatever setting I changed and tested after every change. Turns out, what fixed this for me was actually PCI-E frequency. Just set it back to 100 and I got the crash again. And set it once again to 110, no crashes. Reverted NB voltage back to auto and no problems. I had also connected two seperate PCI-E power cables to the gpu and now I have connected it normally and still no problems. However whenever I set PCI-E frequency to 100 mhz from bios, I can get the crash. When it is 110, there isn’t one.
I will be testing in the upcoming days to be completely sure, however I think I can say the problem is gone.
YET, there is something I wonder… In my particular case, what causes this? Is it because GPU is faulty/defected/whatever that it needs a PCI-e frequency of 110 mhz or is it mobos fault for not being able to support my graphics card’s needs with 100 mhz of PCI-e frequency?
I will RMA my mobo in any case since its integrated sound chip has fried apparently, however I am not sure whether I should RMA my gpu or not. I mean, yes it won’t hurt to RMA it anyway, but I just wonder. What do you think?