Have been putting off raising issues to allow the environment around the Ryzen setups to settle down, but I can't seem to make any real progress after 3 months now.
The main issues I'm currently hitting:
- RAM is not stable above the default 2133MHz. I recently managed to get 2666MHz manually configured and somewhat stable, but still had 2 lockups and a Kernel Mode Exception Trap (KMET) BSOD over the course of 3-4 weeks while on Windows 7.
- VMware Workstation 12.5.6 still reports a CPUID bug trying to power on any VM, despite me disabling SMT and manually tweaking things like IOMMU. I was able to boot into the ESXi 6.5 installer with no issues; I would assume this would be an application issue, though googling reveals people running on Ryzen setups without problems. Trying VirtualBox briefly, it would only let me use 1 CPU, similar to how machines that don't support VT-d appear - and the VM wouldn't boot-to-install anyway, winload.exe saying the CPU is not compatible with 64-bit mode.
Alas I bought this setup to play games, perform development, and to run a beefy Linux VM so I could decommission my KVM and second desktop, none of which I can perform optimally at present
CPU
Ryzen 7 1800X (Stock) with Noctua NH U12S SE-AM4
RAM
2x 16GB Corsair Vengeance LPX 3200MHz - CMK32GX4M2B3200C16
Motherboard
Gigabyte AX370-Gaming 5 with BIOS F4, F5, F5d, currently F6d
Video Card
AMD Radeon R9 290 4GB
PSU
be quiet! Dark Power Pro 750W
Disks
Samsung 256GB M.2 NVMe (boot)
Samsung 1TB 840 EVO
Operating System
Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 x64 (currently Windows 10 Pro x64)
Today, I blew away the Windows 7 install and put Windows 10 Creators Update on; within the space of 6 hours I got another KMET BSOD. I then disabled the XMP Profile, putting the memory back at 2133MHz and full defaults - and I got another total lockup after no more than 15 minutes (screen goes back, fans spin higher, zero response from anything until powered off). This did oddly coincide with opening Firefox 10-20 seconds earlier, which was open when the other BSODs occurred too.
HWMonitor confirms all temperatures are rock solid, and the PSU has been used with an Intel Core i5-2500K and AMD Phenom II X6 1090T using the same graphics card, and I never had any issues over years.
I suspect all the problems could just be down to the RAM (all info I've researched points these to being Hynix), but I'm not willing to spend another £200+ on something which may make zero difference; likewise for getting another motherboard and comparing with that.
Any suggestions?