Quote:
Originally Posted by iinversion 
When you get a BSOD code you want to look at the numbers at the bottom and remember the last 4 digits or so.
The BSOD was probably 1A which means your ram is the cause for the BSOD. Try increasing the voltage to 1.55v or loosening your timings to something like 10-10-10-27 2T.
Another thing to try is increase the IMC voltage (VCCIO or VCCSA in your case) Stock should be 1.05v, raise them both to 1.1v.

When you get a BSOD code you want to look at the numbers at the bottom and remember the last 4 digits or so.
The BSOD was probably 1A which means your ram is the cause for the BSOD. Try increasing the voltage to 1.55v or loosening your timings to something like 10-10-10-27 2T.
Another thing to try is increase the IMC voltage (VCCIO or VCCSA in your case) Stock should be 1.05v, raise them both to 1.1v.
I changed the multiplier to 45 and loosened the timings as you suggested to 10-10-10-27-2T.
At IBT 'Very High' street mode, I BSOD'ed with this message:
"A problem has been detected and Windows has been shut down to prevent damage to your computer. A clock interrupt was not received on a secondary processor within the allocated time interval.
...
....Technical Information: STOP: 0x00000101 (.....311,...o....OXFFFF8800330780.....0003)"
You suggested to change the 'VCCSA' value from 1.05 to 1.1v. I do not have that variable in my BIOS. Instead I have something called 'PCH' below the 'VCCIO' variable in the BIOS screen. Is this the same thing but just called differently? Thanks.





















