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  1. #22

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    Quote Originally Posted by Knytestorme View Post
    It's the PSU.

    I had the exact same issue with the same mobo, stripped everything down and went through my usual diagnostics and had it randomly working and then not working with various parts configs. Changed over the PSU (same brand/model) and has worked flawlessly ever since.

    My thread about the build should be around here somewhere.
    There is also the PSU. If that's bad it will adversely effect the rest of your system. It's easy to swap in the one from your main PC for a test run.

    Quote Originally Posted by Knytestorme View Post
    I would say though that I personally would change the RAM over for tri-channel when using an X58 mobo/cpu just because the i7 X58 cpu's are designed for triple channel memory and the added pathways it allows.

    Some reiteration, with an addition.

    Okay, here is my understanding of ram. Assuming identical sticks of ram, what determines dual or triple channel use is how you use them. You stated you got 24GB of RAM, 6x4gb. Those would populate all of your DIMM slots, allowing for triple channel use. Now, had you bought...only 16GB (4x4gb) they would only populate four of the six DIMM slots, moving you to dual channel mode (Pairing two 4GB sticks with each other for efficiency...dual channel, versus pairing three 4GB sticks with each other..triple channel).

    aka, the ram he has is just fine in the quantities he has. To my knowledge Dual/triple channel mode is dictated by the motherboard based on how many ram slots are filled, and if they match. Since he has six 4gb dimms that match populating every slot, his motherboard will run in triple channel mode using the ram to its full extent. There's nothing wrong with the ram he has, he just bought three kits of 8gb ram (2x4gb) rather than two kits of 12gb ram (3x4gb).


    Here is the model number of the RAM off of the QVL.
    KHX1600C9D3K3/12GX
    Here is the model number of the RAM kedash bought.
    KHX1600C9D3K2/8GX
    Here are the numbers together
    Code:
    KHX1600C9D3K3/12GX
    KHX1600C9D3K2/8GX
    Breaking down the code.
    K - Kingston
    HX- HyperX
    1600-Rated Speed of the RAM
    C9-CAS LATENCY 9
    D3-DDR3
    K2/K3-Number of sticks in the kit
    /12GX/8GX-total amount of ram in the kit
    SO, looking at the code, The only thing seemingly different between the two is the number of dimms in each kit so the amount of ram contained within varies accordingly.

    Think about it, would you (as a company that makes RAM) want to market, develop, and manufacter multiple subsets of ram with the only difference being the ram was dual channel or triple channel. THEN motherboards/CPUs would have to be configured for each subset of ram. There would be multiple versions of ram, motherboards, RMAs galore, and it would be a pain in everyone's ass.

    So instead of all that, in order to assist people who might buy a lower level consumer board that only has four dimm slots vs six, they market their ram as dual channel kits, only containing multiples of two dimms so those people buying ram won't buy extra dimms they don't need.
    The fact he purchased dual channel kits is not the issue. Some (or all of) the ram might be defective (and while I doubt it, it could happen). Best thing to do now is listen to post beeps, also do as other people suggest: reset cmos, remove the motherboard from the case in case there is a short, check the CPU fan, run with no ram/listen for post beeps.

    Basically, as has been suggested. The RAM as far as we know is fine. You do not need to return it unless it is determined to be faulty.
    Last edited by Sajuuk : 02-22-2011 at 10:28 PM
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