03-31-2019 04:12 AM - last edited on 03-06-2024 08:29 PM by ROGBot
03-31-2019 11:10 AM
03-31-2019 02:27 PM
Falkentyne wrote:
Did you change the internal AC/DC loadlines to 0.01 or anything?
I believe one setting on the Asus board will set these to 0.01 automatically.
That error means your CPU voltage is too low, but first try this:
Set your CPU voltage MANUALLY to 1.20v, at 4.7 ghz, and set your cache ratio to 4.4 ghz (this is the usual recommended default voltage set at 4.7 ghz).
Then set your loadline calibration (LLC) to LLC5 or LLC6.
Now test your games and see if you get any more WHEA's.
Internal parity error occurs when the voltage is too low and a game uses AVX instructions. Stuff like Realbench and cinebench and prime95 are far more likely to generate cache hierarchy errors (CPU L0), which is a corrupt instruction register, rather than parity).
03-31-2019 03:39 PM
03-31-2019 04:06 PM
pndiode wrote:
Did you do a fresh Windows installation? Check BIOS/hardware drivers.
https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_10-performance-winpc/whea-logger/897a3ec3-...
03-31-2019 04:45 PM
03-31-2019 10:15 PM
FRBYTE wrote:
I haven't changed anything in bios. I just loaded bios defaults and started using the pc, not even XMP was enabled my cpu uses 1.27 vcore at default settings and it drops down to 1.22 or 1.23 after a few minutes while using prime95 blend test I thought maybe 1.22 is too low for stock settings (as i think MCE is enabled by default) but your comment has me worried because if 1.2 is normal for 4.7 Ghz then the voltage my chip is taking is nowhere near too low as it never dips below 1.22 maybe my processor has degraded too much? because my Aorus board was running it at 1.45 - 1.5 volts due to a bug i found that out and fixed it but maybe damage is done but it never overheated......Should I RMA the processor as it should not be throwing WHEA errors at stock without me tinkering with anything to make the errors go away. What do you suggest I should do.
04-02-2019 05:56 AM
Falkentyne wrote:
You're complaining a lot yet you're refusing to do what I asked you to do.
That's not helping anyone. It's unhelpful if you won't cooperate with people asking you do specific tests.
Set your bios voltage to 1.25v, Set core to 4.7 ghz. Set cache to 4.4 ghz. Set Loadline calibration to LLC6. Don't forget to max out all current and power limits. Test prime blend with these settings or whatever you tested that gave you a WHEA correctable error.
Every CPU should pass this. If you pass, drop the voltage 10mv at a time until you start getting problems, then post where you have issues at.
Note: you said battlefield 5 uses AVX right?
Prime95 won't generate "CPU parity errors". Only games will, that use a "low load" AVX. Apex legends loves to do this on people who have otherwise stable overclocks. So you'll have to also test your games too. However what you CAN test if you can keep the chip cool enough, is prime95 29.7 build 1, and test "AVX fixed 15K FFT's". This is a good test because if you pass this, no games will crash.
If you want to save a lot of time, set your bios voltage to 1.20v first, LLC6, then test prime95 29.7 build 1 (check their forums for the FTP site).
test custom in place AVX 15K-15K fft size.
If you crash, increase voltage 10mv until you are stable. Then post back with results.
03-31-2019 05:11 PM
03-31-2019 06:45 PM
Itzycharles wrote:
Before doing these. Install BIOS/ime/chipset from the board website. Skip the MEUpdate for now
The Bios flash it with 0903 USE Another computer to download the bios. use the included app to change the name of the bios
Chipset Version 10.1.17903.8106
MEI Version 1828.12.0.1152
If you use the included CRATE just find these on the motherboard website and update these manualy. and let see.
Work only with default settings of bios