jamesowens356
Active member
Where can I check the SMART data?
When doing drivers in windows 10, it’s always best to let windows update install them initially and only if it can’t find them should you manually install them.Actually on second thought, I have rebooted Windows and again without plugging in the Oculus Rift it seems OK in device manager:
View attachment 16491
I'll run the software you suggested now and NOT plug in my Oculus Rift and leave things as they are. If I see no issues for a few days I'll try and plug it in and install it then and see if any issues arise after that.
When doing drivers in windows 10, it’s always best to let windows update install them initially and only if it can’t find them should you manually install them.
As you say, let’s see how you get on without the rift installed, but try some other usb devices in that usb card. I have a boggling suspicion that card may be faulty.
I thought crystaldisk gave a smart status? Have you checked the menus? Or maybe it requires a specific version.Where can I check the SMART data?
View attachment 16493
I thought crystaldisk gave a smart status? Have you checked the menus? Or maybe it requires a specific version.
That IS the SMART data. Sadly it seems that SSD is using non-standard SMART counters, hence the 'Vendor specific' label that doesn't help us at all. I've never seen that on a drive before however, has anyone else?Where can I check the SMART data?
View attachment 16493
That's another PFN_LIST_CORRUPT, a memory management error.@ubuysa @SpyderTracks @Nursemorph
Bad news - I had just clicked shut down on my PC to turn it off for the night and it blue screened.
Attached is the log.
If you remove both sticks of RAM and try the test with just one stick, we need to find the faulty stick and then PCS can ship you a replacement next day delivery.So, I had run memtest86 for an hour or two a few weeks ago when diagnosing this myself and it didn't error at all, however unfortunately after under 10 minutes tonight this has happened:
12 errors!
Does anyone know what exactly this means and how I should proceed? I will update first thing in the morning with the overnight results.
If you remove both sticks of RAM and try the test with just one stick, we need to find the faulty stick and then PCS can ship you a replacement next day delivery.
Once it's found errors that's all you need to know. I would end it and try with one stick.Do you think it is worth letting this test run overnight now with 2 sticks or just end it now and re-start with just one stick?
Once it's found errors that's all you need to know. I would end it and try with one stick.
Also, when you're removing the current sticks, make sure before removing them that they're properly inserted, it's possible ones just come loose in transit and if that's the case, inserting it properly may fix the issue.
I'm in complete agreement with SpyderTracks. Find out which stick is giving those errors, or phone PCS and try and persuade them to swap both sticks.
That's going to be your problem though. Glad we got to the bottom of it in the end.
BTW. RAM often does this. It will work fine for a while and then throw errors. That's why we all recommend Memtest86, its 13 tests (I think it's 13?) stress your RAM in every way possible. The 4 iterations of the free version isn't 100% guaranteed to find all RAM issues however, just around 98% of them. The paid for version (it's not expensive) will run up to 15 iterations which really hammers RAM.
If you get no errors on the sticks singly then call PCS, point them at this thread, specifically your Memetest errors, and ask them to swap both sticks.
Via Tapatalk
RAM failures typically affect only one stick but that you had any errors at all indicates that your RAM is flaky at best. I don't work for PCS but I'd be amazed if they didn't change both sticks based on that one Memetest result. It's clearly not 100% reliable.
Via Tapatalk
I have to say...don't think I've ever seen anyone quite so happy to find something is very broken