
Why did you not install a SSD as your boot drive ? I would think about getting one and doing a clean install. Turn Off Hard Disk - is good since it is a Mechanical Drive. When your not using this racing machine shut down. Hibernation: Enabled this is the issue above will fix re not waking up :

While there : Suggest do this : then do the below before restoring it. If there is one below your High Performance would be good.

Type Power in Start Search and change Power from Balanced to Performance. You will possibly find in Device Manager when expand and choose properties your running MS Drivers. Most of all do not accept Graphics/Video Card Updates. : as best as possible in Win 10 Home in the Registry. Most important is do not except Microsoft Driver Updates for about 4 more years. While in BIOS turn off anything called Fast Boot or anything that speeds up the boot. While up there install your Chipset Driver released on : as well as any other drivers you have missed. Note your board is Win 11 capable after BIOS Updates. Max Ram Speed : DDR4-2933 Note off that link is available Intel Downloads.Īnother problem showing is your BIOS Version is 1.00 (note hate MSI as they label ram versions weird until shows on the board) but would seem that that is what yor board was released with and there have been : 8 BIOS releases since that you have missed. Your ram you bought was too fast for the chip. So do all please and in order would be best. HD Tune's Health screen is showing blank for some reason, so I'll work on getting the SMART test, but the other test ran on the application showed no errors. I've run Windows Memory test with no errors, but don't have a flashdrive on hand to use memdiag86 right now. More recently, I noticed that it often happens when I walk away from my PC and let it idle, then come back to my PC at the startup screen instead of waking up from sleep.Ĭan anyone help me figure out what could be the problem?Īttached in the Sysnative zip and below is the Speccy link. I thought that fixed the issue, but now the BSODs are happening frequently and getting annoying since it'll happen while I'm doing dev work on VSCode or even doing basic web surfing on Google Chrome. I turned off XMP mode on the RAM sticks (so now I believe they're set to 2133MHz instead of the labelled 4133MHz).

Then a couple of months ago, I started getting them again much more frequently with errors saying something like "irql_not_less_or_equal" or "kernel security check failure". Finally, it wouldn't boot anymore until I removed one of the RAM sticks so I RMA'd them and everything was fine for a bit. Some time last year, I got a couple BSODs spaced pretty far apart, only when the computer was under load from running games.
