I bought a brand new Intel I7 14700K Windows PC from a leading tech shop here a few weeks ago and it's been crashing ever since I got it. It just restarts for no reason and event viewer says "The system has rebooted without cleanly shutting down first." The workload is very low and it's not overclocked. It's seemed to crash mostly when it's doing nothing. I installed a new BIOS from gigabyte a few days ago with the 0x12B microcode and my machine has crashed twice since - both times were when it was doing nothing at all. Why does my machine still crash when it's doing nothing if the new microcode stops the over-voltage problem? If the CPU is damaged wouldn't it be more likely to crash when it is busy. Is there any way to tell if the CPU is damaged?
It has a 12 month warranty and the shop will investigate if I return it but I thought there might be some knowledge of the Intel CPU bug or of how to diagnose the crashes.
I've had two BSOD crashes but mostly just silent restarts. The two BSOD crashes had bugcheckcode 300 - Windows decided it had got lost when accessing a Samsung USB drive with exfat format so it restarted to prevent damaging the filesystem. I reformatted the drive as NTFS and had no more BSOD since. Strange to get two BSOD the same if the problem is a damaged CPU caused by over-voltage.
The RAM IS G.SKILL Ripjaws S5 32GB DDR5 F5-6000J3636F16GX2-RS5K running at 4800 - deliberately not as fast as it could as it's a development machine, not gaming.
I didn't want to hand over the machine to the shop and deprive myself of its use without understanding a bit more about what could cause the crash and I especially don't want a new CPU fitted without trying to find out more about why it crashes.
It has a 12 month warranty and the shop will investigate if I return it but I thought there might be some knowledge of the Intel CPU bug or of how to diagnose the crashes.
I've had two BSOD crashes but mostly just silent restarts. The two BSOD crashes had bugcheckcode 300 - Windows decided it had got lost when accessing a Samsung USB drive with exfat format so it restarted to prevent damaging the filesystem. I reformatted the drive as NTFS and had no more BSOD since. Strange to get two BSOD the same if the problem is a damaged CPU caused by over-voltage.
The RAM IS G.SKILL Ripjaws S5 32GB DDR5 F5-6000J3636F16GX2-RS5K running at 4800 - deliberately not as fast as it could as it's a development machine, not gaming.
I didn't want to hand over the machine to the shop and deprive myself of its use without understanding a bit more about what could cause the crash and I especially don't want a new CPU fitted without trying to find out more about why it crashes.
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