Probability of RAM causing freezing? |
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stoshrocket
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formerly methos
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O.P. Probability of RAM causing freezing?
A couple of you may remember that a while back I posted about my computer restarting randomly and freezing. Well very recently it got a hell of a lot worse. the basic problem is that the whole computer jut freezes. I've tried checking for overheating, checking the cables, cleaning my computer, and very recently reformatted windows all to no avail. Also however, since the reformatting I've gotten a BSOD instead of a straight freeze twice (in around a month). The code is 0000009c or something of the like, which is apparently a RAM error. How strong is the possibility that buying new RAM would fix the problem?
This post was edited on 10-09-2007 at 07:07 PM by stoshrocket.
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10-09-2007 07:07 PM |
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vaccination
Veteran Member
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RE: Probability of RAM causing freezing?
I would say it's very likely bad RAM, or lack of RAM would cause freezing. Sounds like the PC is running out of memory and subsequently freezing/rebooting.
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10-09-2007 08:14 PM |
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aNILEator
Skinning Contest Winner
...in the wake of the aNILEator
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RE: Probability of RAM causing freezing?
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/329284
is fairly explanatory, unrecoverable hardware error, if you're suspicious of RAM I have 3 x 512 DDR1 sticks I could sell (new mobo is DDR2 and will not take DDR1's so they'll sit gather dust)
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10-09-2007 09:06 PM |
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Snake
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RE: Probability of RAM causing freezing?
I would try Memtest before going out and spending money on RAM. It usually takes a long time to run a full scan. Start it before you go to bed or something.
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10-10-2007 01:11 AM |
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Oxy
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RE: Probability of RAM causing freezing?
quote: Originally posted by Snake
I would try Memtest before going out and spending money on RAM. It usually takes a long time to run a full scan. Start it before you go to bed or something.
thing is, what if it freezes during scan?
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10-10-2007 11:35 AM |
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vaccination
Veteran Member
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RE: Probability of RAM causing freezing?
Memtest runs at bootup, before Windows starts, IIRC. You burn the iso to a cd and boot from it, basically.
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10-10-2007 11:47 AM |
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Snake
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RE: Probability of RAM causing freezing?
I have the floppy version but yes you boot off the disk. Eather one.
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10-10-2007 10:33 PM |
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ShawnZ
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RE: Probability of RAM causing freezing?
what model is your RAM?
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10-10-2007 10:40 PM |
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stoshrocket
Senior Member
formerly methos
Posts: 748 Reputation: 31
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O.P. RE: Probability of RAM causing freezing?
Hey guys, thanks for the suggestions, i managed to get hold of some RAM (which i knew was okay and is compatabile) and try with that instead. It didn't work, i got a blue screen with another 0000009C error again... wierd huh?
quote: Originally posted by ShawnZ
what model is your RAM?
Crucial RAM, I have/had 1GB DDR 400 PC3200 RAM... So most likely it wouldn't be "running" out of RAM either according to vax... quote: Originally posted by vaccination
Sounds like the PC is running out of memory and subsequently freezing/rebooting.
So i dunno what the hell it could be now to be honest... I might run memtest, but is there really any point now i've swapped the RAm over? Thanks again for all the suggestions btw!
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10-11-2007 07:50 PM |
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Adeptus
Senior Member
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RE: Probability of RAM causing freezing?
quote: Originally posted by methos
I might run memtest, but is there really any point now i've swapped the RAm over?
There is. If memtest finds errors and you know the RAM is good, that would point to bad L1 or L2 cache (physically inside the CPU). The caches can typically be disabled in BIOS, so you can do that (one at a time, start with L2), retest, and narrow it down further.
In my experience, bad RAM manifests itself as mostly application crashes and BSODs, while bad cache (especially L1) mostly causes freezing. Any of the above could also mean a bad motherboard. If you determine it is a cache problem, you will need to replace the CPU.
This post was edited on 10-11-2007 at 08:21 PM by Adeptus.
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10-11-2007 08:12 PM |
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