pc crash

for a while now ive been experiencing random pc freezes when I play games. it started after I had a power surge that blew my PSU. I realised that whent he PSU blew it caused damage to other components, i replaced my motherboard and a stick of ram that I found to be faulty. However it didnt 100% fix my PC.
When I play games now, after some time in the game at random intervals, my PC will completely freeze with a sound loop requiring a hard reset. First thing I did was install a temperature monitor program to check my system wasnt overheating. I ran a stress test on the CPU, ran tests on my hard drives and memory. They all past. So I am left with the posibility that my GPU is the hardware at fault, though still hoping it could be a RAM issue.

My question is, is there a test that I can perform to confirm if my GPU is faulty? Any test I can think of would also give errors if a RAM module was faulty.

any help would be greatly apreciated.
 
My question is, is there a test that I can perform to confirm if my GPU is faulty?
You can run OCCT that will give the GPU a stress test. If you have two sticks of RAM you can remove the original, if it runs without crashing you have your answer.
 
this is strange. my PC got through all the tests without issue. I cant recreate my crashes with tests.... perhaps there is something with one of my hard drives that isnt effected by these tests as they arnt reading the hard drive like a game would.
 
Run seatools for windows on the seagate drive.


Click the blue download box a couple paragraphs down.
 
ok so I have run tests on ALL my had drives and they all came back fine. However my OS Drive did have trouble when doing a simple disk cleanup, it seemed to take forever. Also the temperature of my OS drive is "High", its sitting at 52c which doesnt seem to bad to mee but I dont really know enough about these M.2 drives. is 52c too high for this sort of drive?
 
52C is well within limits. Other things to try:
1) Reset the BIOS to defaults.
2)It might be worth doing a BIOS update to see if that improves stability.
3)Also try removing the original stick of RAM for a while and see if the crashes go away.

so if the crashes remain the other rare possibility is the CPU suffered some damage from the voltage spike.
 
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