a5cent
New member
Your stress tests are likely passing because the drained capacitor I propose is fully charged by the time the tests are stared and/or the power supply is in its efficiency window under the higher load. Either way, your RAM at that point is getting the power it needs.
I'm thinking the problem likely starts within the first second powering on from cold boot after the caps have drained and not a specific logon screen capacitor.
I have degrees in both electronics and software engineering, and all I can say is that this makes no sense whatsoever. There is also no such thing as a "logon screen capacitor". Please stop the FUD.
It's the voltage regulator on the motherboard that powers the DRAM modules, and the DRAM modules themselves handle the memory refresh. If the OP's issue was in any way related to memory refresh cycles (which it isn't), the issue would be the result of a defective DRAM module, and we'd witness the problematic behavior whenever that faulty DRAM module was inserted, not only when both of them are inserted.
Perhaps it is the same address space(s) in RAM that are losing their refresh each time and the reason why you are seeing the identical blue screen logs.
In an earlier post I already mentioned that this can't possibly be the cause. Read up on Windows ASLR if you want to learn why.