Hey all,

I took a gamble on a “for parts” 5800x3d that had a few bent pins. I currently have a 5600x with an ASUS TUF x570-Plus WiFi and thought this would be a nice upgrade.

The problem I’m seeing, is that the system won’t post with the 5800 and hangs with the orange/yellow DRAM LED on the motherboard.

I thought to update the BIOS with the old CPU, but I already had a version that would support the new one. After that, I tried swapping RAM modules and only using one, then the other. Eventually I updated the BIOS to the most recent version and resetting with the jumper, but it still won’t post.

Looking at the pin layout and considering the bent pins were all in one corner, I am wondering if the original owner tried to install this CPU rotated 90° and delivered some high power where it shouldn’t’ve gone.

Any fun ideas, or did I just pay for a nice learning experience?

  • @Alexstarfire
    link
    171 month ago

    Sounds like you paid for a learning experience. If you bent the pound back, got it to fit in the socket, and it doesn’t work then there’s not really anything else to do. This is assuming your MB actually supports the CPU.

    • swayevenly
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      fedilink
      English
      31 month ago

      Just checked Asus’ support page and it does. Oddly enough, it lacks information on what RAM it supports.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        21 month ago

        If it’s like any of its competitors, it’s probably up to 3200 M/Ts officially and 3600+ unofficially. The QVL still sometimes has models that don’t work correctly at the XMP speeds provided, so that’s more of a rule of thumb anyway.