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#31
Yeah good thing you are. At least the major problem has been found :)
Yeah good thing you are. At least the major problem has been found :)
I just wish there is a better way to determinate which stick is bad, with out testing each one...
That's a good question. That's how I've had to do it. And that's what I tell my clients, and whoever needs computer help
No. With memtest86 I had to press the reset button and reboot
But be sure to remove the drive that you used for memtest, and it will boot back to Windows
If you use Windows memory diagnostics then yes it would boot to Windows when done
If I may add a comment, once you see an error in red with Memtest86 there is no point carrying on the test, any error is bad! Therefore it is quite quick to test each stick in turn in slot 1 and identify the one which shows up the errors as bad, (you indicated the error showed up straight away), then you can fit the others back in and run the extended test on these good memory sticks to be sure your system is OK.