Running ROG STRIX X570-I-GamingNope, I'm on a strix-e w/o issues. As I wrote though, I re-did my settings.
Random reboots with 2407 flashed back to 2203 no problems.
Windows 10 2004
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Running ROG STRIX X570-I-GamingNope, I'm on a strix-e w/o issues. As I wrote though, I re-did my settings.
Not at all, it almost always happened when my system was idleit seems to happen when you push the system?
Not at all, it almost always happened when my system was idle
Is this an AMD or ASUS issue ultimately? I have a ROG STRIX B550-F Gaming Board with BIOS version 608 so I’m not upgrading until this is fixed. I am able to run Corsair 3600MHz RAM no problem with XMP/DOCP settings.
Just wanted to report that my ASRock X570 Taichi has reboot problems with the same AGESA version as the ASUS one. Rolled back and now solid as a rock. AMD needs to work on this.
Looks like it's just the X570-E that 2408 has been released for so farI don't think the 2408 has been released for the x570-i yet
I'm on a x570-e with the Ryzen 3900x and 32 GB of 3600 Mhz ddr4 ram. I updated to the 2407 bios and got random reboots. I downgraded to 1408 and my system is stable now.
Can you check the windows event log to see what caused the reboots?
Unfortunately, the same thing happened to the 2407 BIOS in my new board. Random reboots, random disconnects from the Adobe Creative Cloud which resulted in me having to re-sign in and re-enter a new security code just to log back in. And I would not trust the version 2203 that came before 2407 with that board, given its own problems. Under the normal software methods I could not downgrade the BIOS below 2203 as the procedure would simply fail. If I had stuck with the PRIME X570-P I would have been stuck on a 2000-series BIOS no matter what unless I go through totally unsupported means because the PRIME and TUF series boards have absolutely no BIOS Flashback feature whatsoever. I therefore downgraded my X570-F down to the 1407 BIOS that originally came on the motherboard using the BIOS Flashback feature on the ROG motherboards, which is the only official way to downgrade from one major BIOS version to the one below it.
It turned out that it wasn't the BIOS after all. My system's Creative Cloud installation was borked with the BIOS update. You see, the software treated the new BIOS as an entirely different PC, which was why it acted so wonky. Thus, I had to completely uninstall the programs while the system was still running the older BIOS version, and then reinstall the programs after updating the BIOS.i've never heard of a bios causing Random internet disconnects.
All in all, had I known this, it turned out that you pretty much get what you pay for, when it comes to RAM modules. Real JEDEC memory that's rated at such high speeds are either unobtainable at reseller level or are only supplied to OEM system manufacturers, and the few resellers that stock such RAM charge too much money for the loose, often very-high-latencies that such modules deliver. And most high-speed DDR4 modules that are readily available are all too often native DDR4-2133 or DDR4-2666 high-latency parts that have been tested by the memory distributors to be stable at their advertised speeds - on an unlocked, higher-end Intel CPU platform. With AMD platforms, anything goes.
Mini-rant over.
What do you suggest if your system is running at stock with an older BIOS and totally, totally stable all BIOS settings still at default, with no overclocking whatsoever.Now that I let the watchers in this thread know what memory chips that I am using in my system, if you are suffering from random reboots with the 2407 BIOS, then it is very likely that your system wasn't 100% stable with earlier BIOS versions with the same RAM and the same speeds and timings: While such memory running on systems with earlier BIOS versions lock up the system or cause program crashes, the 2407 BIOS will force a shutdown and reboot without ever letting you know. You see, if you are one of the unlucky ones who suffer from random reboots with the 2407 BIOS even when your PC is idling, then the next thing to do is to reset the memory speed and timings to the default JEDEC (not D.O.C.P.) profile, and then download and run Thaiphoon on your PC. More than likely you have memory parts that simply cannot handle such high speeds on any AMD platform.
Geez.
I was assuming that the memory is overclocked (and I consider XMP or DOCP as overclocking), in my post above. If the system were unstable at the RAM's very loose, very slow JEDEC settings/timings (this means the RAM's native speed and timings), with either old or new BIOS versions, then it would have simply been faulty RAM.What do you suggest if your system is running at stock with an older BIOS and totally, totally stable all BIOS settings still at default, with no overclocking whatsoever.
I was assuming that the memory is overclocked (and I consider XMP or DOCP as overclocking), in my post above. If the system were unstable at the RAM's very loose, very slow JEDEC settings/timings (this means the RAM's native speed and timings), with either old or new BIOS versions, then it would have simply been faulty RAM.
I am on 2407 right now on my ROG STRIX X570-F Gaming. But with me having to run my RAM at only DDR4-3466 speed due to the Hynix M-die based RAM that I'm currently using in my system, with the video editing programs that I'm currently running, I experience no difference in performance.Are you with the 2407 right now? Have you noticed your system a little more responsive?
So if I haven't touched any BIOS settings except for the date/time, does that still count as overclocking the RAM?I was assuming that the memory is overclocked (and I consider XMP or DOCP as overclocking), in my post above. If the system were unstable at the RAM's very loose, very slow JEDEC settings/timings (this means the RAM's native speed and timings), with either old or new BIOS versions, then it would have simply been faulty RAM.
So if I haven't touched any BIOS settings except for the date/time, does that still count as overclocking the RAM?
FWIW, the RAM (2 x 16 GB Ballistix CL 3600) I first got had a defect, which was why my system would reboot suddenly. No BSOD, just crash-bam-reboot. No problem with the RMA, and now the system ahsn't had a single incident. No BSOD (Win 10 64 Pro), no reboots. I think it's time to start some overclocking, but, blimey, even though I'm locked down, I've never been so busy in years and years.
On my first 3900x, it took any bios from Asus w/o much issue however I still noticed the reboot issues. I kinda didn't pay it much mind since I used a fairly pedestrian 24/7 config and hardly ever needed to reboot. However I recently got a 2nd cpu and have been testing out different oc's on it and man it has been a freaking huge chore. I have to say the new bios' all kind of suck hard. They all have issues with rebooting. Cold boots are fine but a hot reboot, no dice. I ended up with a routine, shutdown then reboot. If there is an issue and I don't wanna clear bios, then flip the psu button off, hit power to clear the charge, then flip psu back on and it boots. In other cases with oc'd settings that should be easy to run fail to boot over and over and over. But if I clear the charge on the psu, it boots. WTH Asus? My board displays the same behavior unless it is completely default settings which is ridiculous. I'm contemplating flashback to 1409...