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#21
Can you get information on:
PSU, you can check you computer documentation or open the case and get it off of the PSU.
Case, brand of computer case, this may be helpful for cooling issues.
Cooling, CPU cooler Stock? or ? How many case fans?
This should be a good indication that your RAM is working, with 24GB RAM or any RAM it can pass memtest86+ several times and then fail, it can be an intermittent issue.
We'll try a couple setting changes, if you still get crashes you may need to remove three RAM cards for testing purposes.
Let's try setting adjustments first, will put them below.
Your motherboard site lists FF as the latest BIOS version, yours is FA. No information on the BIOS improvements were listed.
Updating BIOS can be risky, so we will leave it for now but, may have to come back to it later.
Your RAM timings are set to JEDEC#2, the frequency is lower than the RAMs max frequency, which is good because with that much RAM you will usually need to lower the frequency and/or timings to get it to run stable.
Real Temp just monitors the CPU core temps, idle is when you have no apps open and you computer is not doing anything.
You will have to induce the load by running your highest resource usage program, video encoding or game, there are specialized apps to stress your system.
We may need to run one of these to test the CPU and CPU cooling abilities.
Post your idle and load (as mentioned above) temps first.
These voltages look fairly stock except for the slight bump in QPI/Vtt voltage, this is the CPU integrated memory controller voltage.
You may need to disable or un-install for testing purposes, let's adjust RAM settings first.
If a MS update fails to install it will notify you, have you seen any notifications regarding a failed update?
You should get 4-5 MSE updates a week.
Most important is to post your CPU temps, post a screen shot of Real Temp, at an idle and under a load, your most CPU/RAM intensive program.
The max recommended CPU Core temp from Intel is 73°C.
If your temps go above this, shut down any programs you have running and check if the CPU is cooling down.
Bump your DRAM voltage to 1.550v and your QPI/Vtt voltage to 1.20v.
Try to re-create your crash scenario, or just use it normally if it has been random.
Let us know the results.