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Hi all! I have just gotten the b650e-e and can't get past this error code. I got past it before through bios flashback but now since booting again I cannot get past it. I have reinserted everything and tried to reinstall the flashback but nothing.
I have been through everything and simply cannot find a solution.
PLEASE HELP!!
Asus Strix z790-E, 13700K, 2x16 Trident Z 6800, 3060TI, Win 11, dual monitors
Just got this put together last week, everything appears normal, XMPI profile enabled and seems to be running at 6800.
But after boot to windows, everything normal and seems to be running as expected, the q-code keeps jumping back and forth from 30, 31, and 32. Does this right after boot, without going to sleep. Been watching it for 5+ minutes after normal boot, still doing it.
Is this normal? I thought once the computer was booted up, the q-code should should be stable at A0 or something.
Hallo Leute, gestern kamen meine neuen Computerteile an, außer der SSD, also habe ich ihn ohne gebaut. Bis heute gab es keine Probleme damit, dann kamen SSD und Lüfter-Header-Splitter an. Ich habe die SSD und die Gehäuselüfter installiert, danach gingen alle RGB-Lichter aus und die PC-Power-Leuchte begann, Fehlercodes anzuzeigen (schnelles und langsames Blinken). Ich habe versucht, den PC zu zerlegen und wieder zusammenzubauen, aber nichts hat funktioniert. Habt ihr irgendwelche Vorschläge, was das verursachen könnte?
Hier sind meine Spezifikationen;
AMD Ryzen 5 7500f
Asus Prime B650M-K
Kingston 5600 MHz 16GB x 2 RAM CL36
MSI MAG 650W Netzteil
Palit RTX 4070 Super
Kingston NV3 SSD
DeepCool AK500 CPU-Kühler
Corsair C3000D Gehäuse
und 3-fach Lüfter-Splitter für die vorderen Gehäuselüfter.
Pc won't boot the first time and will display a 1A error and fans and everything will spin, but a quick shut down and restart fixes it and everything works like normal. Ram is in correct spots and everything appears to be working correctly besides that. Just wondering if its a bios update that's needed or something worse.
Hi everyone!
Today I received an older PC from a friend of mine. I picked it up, he showed me that the PC was working and then I took it with me in the car. When I arrived home, I connected it to a monitor but it didn't display anything. The motherboard displayed a Qcode 0d. When I start the PC, it starts with Qcode 3f and quickly switches to 0d, where it stays.
Relevant software and hardware I am using: Motherboard: ASUS ROG Crosshair VII Hero (WiFi) Video card: Geforce GTX 1660 ti armor 6g oc Processor: AMD Ryzen 7 2700x eight-core processor Hard drive: Samsung ssd 860 qvo 1tb RAM: Corsair DDR4 Vengeance LPX 16GB (1x) Power supply: Corsair RM750x
I have already found and tried some things on the internet. The conclusion was that it often was either the RAM or the motherboard. What I have tried:
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Putting the RAM in other slots. When I received it, it was in slot B1 and it worked there. I tried the three other slots.
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Trying my own PC's RAM in the slots.
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Trying my own PC's dual RAMs in slots A1-B1 & A2-B2.
Conclusion -> the RAM is not broken.
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Verified that no cables were loose or pins were bent. This was not the case except for the pins of the USB 3.0 ports of the case. Without these, the PC should still start, right?
Conclusion -> all cables are properly connected, the graphics card and power supply both work in my PC.
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Verified that my CPU is compatible with the motherboard -> it is stated on the Asus website that this is the case.
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Verified that my RAM is compatible with the motherboard -> this was not stated on the Asus website as far as I could see.
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Flashed the bios using a USB stick, reset the CMOS and used the reset button on the motherboard.
My conclusion so far is that it is either the combination of the RAM and the motherboard or the motherboard is defective. The strange thing is that it still worked at my friend's place. Could it be that something went wrong in the car or did I do something very stupid when I connected it?
Are there any other solutions? How can I verify that this is indeed the correct conclusion and what would be the logical next step? Buying a new motherboard?
I'm curious about your thoughts.
Best regards,
CoachCrowd
Hey, all!
I just built a brand new PC and realized my mobo (model on title) is showing these cycling Q-Code 'errors', ranging from 30 to 36, apparently.
Consulting the manual, I learned the 30 code means the system is waking up from the S3 sleeping state (??), 31 means memory installed (and why that shows up now and then is a mystery to me), and the range 32-36 means CPU post-memory inicialization. Google told me it might be a badly seated CPU.
However, the thing is: I am indeed running a i9-13900K using a contact frame from Thermal Grizzly (which is tricky to properly mount), but the system is apparently functioning perfectly. So if the system boots normally and presents no falty behavior, why is the mobo showing these codes?
Any help or insight is appreciated! Thanks!