brandonkick
Well-Known Member
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So I have this laptop that I'm working on, and in a round about way I end up running the built in hardware tests. It decides there are issues with the RAM modules, but of course doesn't say which one or give any more detail than an error code.
I diagnose this machine to be the victim of a middle eastern Kevin style tune up and windows will not boot.
Machine appears to have zero on it beyond what you'd find on a clean install, so looks to be a great candidate for a nuke and pave and upgrade to SSD as this thing has a WD Blue 1TB. Not a bad specced machine though, 6th Gen Core i5 and 8GB of ram.
Anyways, I decide to download Passmark's memtest86 and give it a whirl. 4 passes complete with zero errors... so did I not do enough passes? Is the HP test worthless? I can replace the sticks for about $50 but I'd hate to recommend a replacement when they seem fine.
TL;DR - Does anyone put stock into the HP built in testing tools?
I diagnose this machine to be the victim of a middle eastern Kevin style tune up and windows will not boot.
Machine appears to have zero on it beyond what you'd find on a clean install, so looks to be a great candidate for a nuke and pave and upgrade to SSD as this thing has a WD Blue 1TB. Not a bad specced machine though, 6th Gen Core i5 and 8GB of ram.
Anyways, I decide to download Passmark's memtest86 and give it a whirl. 4 passes complete with zero errors... so did I not do enough passes? Is the HP test worthless? I can replace the sticks for about $50 but I'd hate to recommend a replacement when they seem fine.
TL;DR - Does anyone put stock into the HP built in testing tools?