- Joined
- Jan 1, 2021
- Messages
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System Name | The Sparing-No-Expense Build |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 5 5600X |
Motherboard | Asus ROG Strix X570-E Gaming Wifi II |
Cooling | Noctua NH-U12S chromax.black |
Memory | 32GB: 2x16GB Patriot Viper Steel 3600MHz C18 |
Video Card(s) | NVIDIA RTX 3060Ti Founder's Edition |
Storage | 500GB 970 Evo Plus NVMe, 2TB Crucial MX500 |
Display(s) | AOC C24G1 144Hz 24" 1080p Monitor |
Case | Lian Li O11 Dynamic EVO White |
Power Supply | Seasonic X-650 Gold PSU (SS-650KM3) |
Software | Windows 11 Home 64-bit |
I don't know if this is the correct forum for this post (Hardware/System Builder's Advice just didn't seem appropriate as it's not strictly hardware and/or system; mods feel free to move to another forum as appropriate) but here I go anyways.
This is the second time a vendor-specific issue has caused me to pull half my hair out.
First, I've been dealing with unexplained crashes in a new AMD AM4-based system that has an Asus motherboard in it plus a Ryzen 5 5600X.
After a month of running okay, it just froze solid in the middle of games without even spitting out a bluescreen.
Troubleshooting went from changing out the RAM which happened to be a non-QVL non-kit, system corruptions leading to multiple OS reinstalls, multiple memtests to no avail, CPU checking software, etc etc.
The problem turned out to be (most likely) PBO Fmax Enhancer - an Asus-specific feature that is not even supposed to be used on 5000 series processors, because they would misbehave!
I was on the verge of throwing out my $350 motherboard and getting a similarly-priced AsRock one - which definitely would have fixed the (non-AsRock) issue, leading me to junk a perfectly working board!
Second one is when I tried to install Grub on my new Windows 10 laptop running Intel Optane (this was back in 2019 when Intel was peddling Optane to gullible layman Intel loyalists). Try hard as I might, I just couldn't load the bootloader! It just went straight to Windows!
A couple hundred lost hair later, I realized that Intel had TWO copies of the EFI - one on the Optane drive and one on the hard drive, and all I had done was replace the C: drive one with the bootloader, which was getting BYPASSED BECAUSE THE OPTANE ONE WAS THE ONE GETTING LOADED UNLESS YOU JUST WENT OUT AND DISABLED OPTANE ENTIRELY! AAAAAAAARGH!
This is the second time a vendor-specific issue has caused me to pull half my hair out.
First, I've been dealing with unexplained crashes in a new AMD AM4-based system that has an Asus motherboard in it plus a Ryzen 5 5600X.
After a month of running okay, it just froze solid in the middle of games without even spitting out a bluescreen.
Troubleshooting went from changing out the RAM which happened to be a non-QVL non-kit, system corruptions leading to multiple OS reinstalls, multiple memtests to no avail, CPU checking software, etc etc.
The problem turned out to be (most likely) PBO Fmax Enhancer - an Asus-specific feature that is not even supposed to be used on 5000 series processors, because they would misbehave!
I was on the verge of throwing out my $350 motherboard and getting a similarly-priced AsRock one - which definitely would have fixed the (non-AsRock) issue, leading me to junk a perfectly working board!
Second one is when I tried to install Grub on my new Windows 10 laptop running Intel Optane (this was back in 2019 when Intel was peddling Optane to gullible layman Intel loyalists). Try hard as I might, I just couldn't load the bootloader! It just went straight to Windows!
A couple hundred lost hair later, I realized that Intel had TWO copies of the EFI - one on the Optane drive and one on the hard drive, and all I had done was replace the C: drive one with the bootloader, which was getting BYPASSED BECAUSE THE OPTANE ONE WAS THE ONE GETTING LOADED UNLESS YOU JUST WENT OUT AND DISABLED OPTANE ENTIRELY! AAAAAAAARGH!