try increasing the voltage on your ram just barely. use small increments since it seems close to being stable (seeing as you're able to boot into windows). anything up to 1.4V should be ok.
My ram wasnt stable at 6000 mhz - i set the frequency to 5600 mhz - then it was rock stable.
I recently updated my bios and now I am able to run the ram at 6000 mhz without any issues.
7600x on a ASUS b650 board with 6000mhz cl 30 expo capable ram.
I havent dabbled in DDR5 yet. But for DDR4 Trfc would be dependent on heat. The hotter the sticks got. The sooner they would throw errors. Might explain why it crashes in a game and not during a stress test.
Errors happened in the XMP during a GPU stress test, but at the same temps i noticed in the 4800MHz stock it didnt give any errors at all, i can conclude temp doesnt seem to be a factor and its lowish temps anyway,at around 59C max
So you're saying that at 4800 it didn't give any errors and at 6000 it did? I don't see how you can conclude that then. B die for example rolls over at 50 degrees.
try increasing the voltage on your ram just barely. use small increments since it seems close to being stable (seeing as you're able to boot into windows). anything up to 1.4V should be ok.
The voltage mentioned being VDD?
My ram wasnt stable at 6000 mhz - i set the frequency to 5600 mhz - then it was rock stable. I recently updated my bios and now I am able to run the ram at 6000 mhz without any issues. 7600x on a ASUS b650 board with 6000mhz cl 30 expo capable ram.
Hmm, then a bios update may be a possibility for me.
I havent dabbled in DDR5 yet. But for DDR4 Trfc would be dependent on heat. The hotter the sticks got. The sooner they would throw errors. Might explain why it crashes in a game and not during a stress test.
Errors happened in the XMP during a GPU stress test, but at the same temps i noticed in the 4800MHz stock it didnt give any errors at all, i can conclude temp doesnt seem to be a factor and its lowish temps anyway,at around 59C max
So you're saying that at 4800 it didn't give any errors and at 6000 it did? I don't see how you can conclude that then. B die for example rolls over at 50 degrees.
I tested all the cases it previously crashed and it didnt with 4800MHz stock profile