It looks like your mem is fine. You may have a faulty mobo or psu. Which BIOS are you running, again? Also, are you using the lastest version of memtest?
I just came home after 7 hours of letting memtest run with both sticks at 1.9v at DDR2-800, and it had run 242 passes with 216 errors. I had last looked at 2 or so hours, and it had not produced any errors.
I'm going to let it run overnight at 1.9v DDR2-533.
I would say motherboard or powersupply. Easiest and quickest way to find out which one: go buy a new PSU from Best Buy. You can always reutrn it should the mobo end-up being the culprit.
I'm not convinced about the power supply though. I can't see a system working into windows, and running memtest fine for one stick, but bad for two when it's anything but a mobo issue.
I have gone down the same path myself: calculated all the wattage of all the devices and convinced myself that there was enough power; had random lock-ups; memory errors; rebooting when the graphics card tries to run DirectX games, etc.
Replaced the 250W PSU with a 400W PSU and all the faults went away...
As phile says you can always return it or keep it as a spare/future computer.
As you say it could be the MOBO but the only way to find out is to isolate each component in turn and replace with a "known good" component - start with the PSU!
First thing I'd do is set all bios options to defaults and replace the PSU.
Even if its not the PSU, having a great test/backup/spare isnt a bad idea, so not a very useless purchase.
If you cant fathom that, do the BestBuy thing so you can return it.
Sounds to me like a possible short, maybe you dropped a screw in the case touching a portion of the motherboard, or more likely PSU. PSU denial is easy to come by, I understand full well.
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