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Persistent BSoD Crashes on Ryzen 7500f / Gigabyte A620M Workstation Build

Hanna Twins 0 Reputation points
2026-04-16T11:54:40.8933333+00:00

We have this build with a Ryzen 7500f and an RX 6700 XT for our rendering tasks, but the thing is it keeps crashing to a blue screen every thirty minutes. I've got a single stick of XPG Lancer Blade 16GB RAM clocked at 6000 MHz on a Gigabyte A620M S2H board, but I can't get through a single Zoom meeting without the OS falling over. Does anyone know if these specific specs have known stability issues on Windows? Please help!

Windows for business | Windows Server | Devices and deployment | Configure application groups
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  1. Jason Nguyen Tran 18,725 Reputation points Independent Advisor
    2026-04-26T00:55:28.48+00:00

    Hi Hanna Twins,

    I’m following up to check whether the issue has been resolved. Feel free to reply if you need further information. If the information provided was helpful, please click "Accept Answer" to help others in the community. Thank you!

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  2. Jason Nguyen Tran 18,725 Reputation points Independent Advisor
    2026-04-16T12:39:45.19+00:00

    Hi Hanna Twins,

    Based on your specs, the Ryzen 7500f and RX 6700 XT combination is solid, but the instability you’re seeing is often linked to memory configuration. Running a single stick of DDR5 RAM at 6000 MHz on the Gigabyte A620M S2H board can be problematic, because many AM5 motherboards are more stable with dual‑channel kits and at slightly lower speeds. I’d recommend testing the RAM at JEDEC default speeds (usually 4800 MHz) to see if stability improves.

    Another step is to update your BIOS to the latest version, since Gigabyte has released several updates to improve compatibility with Ryzen 7000 series CPUs. It’s also worth checking that your chipset drivers and GPU drivers are fully up to date. If the crashes persist, try running Windows Memory Diagnostic or MemTest86 to rule out faulty RAM. Sometimes even high‑end sticks can cause issues if the timings are too aggressive for the board.

    You should also review your power supply capacity, as rendering tasks can stress both CPU and GPU. An underpowered or unstable PSU can trigger BSoDs. Finally, check the Windows Event Viewer logs to see if the crashes point to a specific driver or hardware fault.

    I hope this gives you a clear path forward. If you find this answer helpful, please consider clicking Accept Answer so others can benefit too.

    Jason.

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