Then run heavy apps. If system crashes only then — your RAM is faulty but was being masked by pagefile usage. Would you like a one-line PowerShell script to automate logging memory diagnostic results every boot?
bcdedit /bootsequence memdiag That sets memory diagnostic as the — useful for remote troubleshooting. 3. The pro trick: Use wmic to check memory health without rebooting Yes, Windows 11 still supports WMIC (deprecated but works):
wmic memorychip get status If it returns OK or Status OK , your RAM is passing basic electrical self-checks. If blank or error — deeper issue likely. Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_MemoryDevice | Select-Object Status, Availability Better yet — check for corrected memory errors (ECC RAM or reported by firmware): windows 11 memory check
mdsched.exe Or for advanced control:
Get-WinEvent -FilterHashtable @LogName='System'; ID=19 | Select-Object TimeCreated, Message Event ID 19 = “WHEA-Logger” memory corrected error — early warning of flaky RAM. Windows 11 compresses memory aggressively. If your Memory Diagnostic passes but you still get crashes, check memory pressure : Then run heavy apps
Here’s an interesting, slightly under-the-radar guide to memory checking on — going beyond just running the basic tool. 1. The Built-in Way (but with a twist) Most people know: Start → type "Windows Memory Diagnostic" → Restart now .
Task Manager → Performance → Memory Look at vs “Available” — if Committed > RAM size, you’re oversubscribed, and compression/pagefile is hiding a memory leak. 6. Ultimate test: Run mdsched.exe in extended mode Most people run standard mode. But: bcdedit /bootsequence memdiag That sets memory diagnostic as
System Properties → Advanced → Performance Settings → Advanced → Change → No pagefile → reboot.