I got myself a custom system and all seemed well for the first week , then the problems started it would not boot up from cold or suddenly lock for no apprent reason . Fast forward to a few weeks ago and it wassent back for repair and they apprently replaced the motherboard and main chip since they said there was a power issue with it . got it back 3 days ago and it has been redownloading my steam cataslog and i =noticed it wa sl;ocking up again so i removed the oc from 4.2 to started 3.3 and continued fine all night long then we had a power cut went to switch it on after it and it just kept on locking up . disabled the m2 in the bios and reinstalled windows on the other SSD no problems at all any idea how to resurrect the m2 or is it toast , I just feel that all the problems i have had from this system steams from having this flacky drive or has anyone else have any other ideas
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If you already have Windows installed on your other SSD, you should try:
1. Re-enable the M2 SSD in BIOS
2. Change boot order in BIOS so that the system will try to boot from your other SSD, not the M2 SSD
With luck, your computer can boot from the BIOS on other SSD, and you can then inspect the M2 SSD from that Windows. If you get it to show on Windows, you can check if it's working with a program like HHDScan:
http://hddscan.com/
But I don't know if your problem is with the SSD or with something else. If the SSD were the cause, then removing OC on your processor should not have helped.
If you have a spare USB stick, and don't need your computer for a while, you can test RAM with MemTest86
http://www.memtest86.com/
It's also possible that a problem with RAM would cause both instability, and something that looks like problems with HD as files get corrupted during installation/download/copying.
One example is showing us a CLEAN fresh HD,when we should be seeing results with tons of files loaded like in real time use.
Same goes for GPU's,you cannot take hardware you see advertised as being 100% the same as what YOU would be buying over the counter.
Good trend to make is to be VERY skeptical and see/test for yourself,don't believe what salesmen are trying to sell you or websites are advertising.
There is ONLY one person you can trust....YOURSELF.
Never forget 3 mile Island and never trust a government official or company spokesman.
Evidence says its the m.2, but gut says that memory is probably clocked over the top.
Things that fail slowly are the PSU and memory.
SSDs can fail in other ways. The most common failure I have seen is that they just stop working. This could be just about anything failing on the circuit board.
Also Standard HDD's if taken care of properly can last 11 years, got some 11 years old and still going lol.
And there is every indication that SSDs will follow the same trend - if your lucky, they ~can~ last a really long time.