had a friend with similar issues which cleared up when I replaced the 4 sticks with two sticks ( same amount of memory. I suspected a mem voltage issue with all banks full.
luck

At 04:02 PM 1/14/2016, Robert Martin Jr. Poked the stick with:
For the hell of it you might want to run memtest from a boot USB or CD. I've had a couple sticks of good name brand memory go bad and cause random issues. Could be something on the motherboard going out but check the simple stuff first.Â
lopaka


      From: Winterlight <[email protected]>
 To: [email protected]
 Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2016 2:48 PM
 Subject: Re: [H] Craig >ASUS P9X79 WS


I have thought of that. There is a minor meaningless BIOS update
available but I was planning on flashing it as soon as I have a good
night for the down time.

At 02:42 PM 1/14/2016, you wrote:
>On 14/01/2016 5:06 PM, Winterlight wrote:
>>I have a problem that has something to do with my ASUS P9X79 WS
>>which I believe you are running.
>>
>>No overclock. All RAM slots are filled with Crucial RAM. There is a
>>video card and a couple of inexpensive SATA controllers... one 2
>>port external and one two port internal. One Micron SSD, one
>>Samsung EVO, one Raptor and four WD Reds.
>>
>>The board takes forever to get through POST and then is very slow
>>boot. Right now dual boots Win 8.1 and 10. But once it boots it runs perfectly
>>
>>When I am in the BIOS it feels slow and sticky. When it posts it
>>slows down a lot when loading the controllers, sometimes it
>>restarts itself to try again. It doesn't matter if I remove the
>>controller it hangs up on, or  remove the drives that are plugged
>>into that controller, or disconnect USB devices... so it doesn't
>>give me any indications of what is causing this.
>>
>>This workstation is mission critical to my business interest so I
>>would hate to have to tear it down and rebuild it testing one piece
>>at a time. Any thoughts on what could be causing this? Thanks
>I assume you've updated the BIOS?  I'd install the most recent BIOS,
>and I'd also reset the CMOS to defaults with jumper.
>
>T
>
>





Date:  Thursday, January 14th, 2016

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