Your RAM is currently operating at a lower frequency than it was designed for. It is running at 1799.8 MT/s, while its rated speed is 2000 MT/s.
This doesn’t cause issues, but you may miss out on some performance.
Enabling the proper memory profile (XMP/EXPO/DOCP) in the BIOS usually restores the RAM to its intended speed. It’s optional, but adjusting this setting can help your system run a bit faster.
The drive Samsung SSD 840 PRO Series has logged 217 CRC error(s) on its SATA interface. These are bus-level transmission errors and indicate a connection problem — not a fault with the drive itself. Common causes are a loose, damaged, or low-quality SATA cable, a faulty SATA port, or a flaky backplane or drive sled.
Reseat the SATA data cable, try a different SATA port, and replace the cable if errors continue to accumulate.
We detected 1 storage device(s) that are not partitioned or formatted. The affected device(s) are: SUNEAST SE900NVG3 512G. Windows cannot use these drives until they are initialized and set up.
Open the Disk Management tool to initialize the device(s), create a partition, and format the drive so it becomes usable.
The drive ST8000DM004-2CX188 has logged 6,867 CRC error(s) on its SATA interface — a severe count indicating a persistent connection problem. This is NOT a drive failure; the drive itself is likely healthy, but the cable, port, or backplane carrying its data is unreliable. Each CRC error means data had to be retransmitted, which can cause stalls, timeouts, and ultimately data corruption if the connection drops at the wrong moment.
Immediately reseat or replace the SATA data cable, try a different SATA port, and check for issues with the drive sled or backplane in this chassis. If multiple drives in the same system show CRC errors, the chassis wiring is the likely culprit.
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