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#11
Yes, gradually raise it until it becomes unstable then pull it back to the last stable speed
if it stays that way then you can raise it again to confirm that it is the RAM speeds :) .
Yes, gradually raise it until it becomes unstable then pull it back to the last stable speed
if it stays that way then you can raise it again to confirm that it is the RAM speeds :) .
Hello there,
I replaced my old video card with a nvidia 770 evga and the temperatures on it are much better. No overheating is occurring on any of my pc components.
I am still getting bsod with stop code 124. Attached new zip file.
Windows 7 Ultimate 64bit
z87x-ud4h Gigabyte
180 GB Corsair GForce SSD (tested with OS installed)
1TB Caviar Black WD (tested with OS installed)
EVGA GTX 770
850W CoolerMaster
8GB Corsair Vengeance Pro 2133MHz (clocked at 1600MHz) // 6 GB Corsair Dominator 1600MHz (for testing)
i7 4770k 3.5GHz (turbo off)