Kernel Panic With 4k 240 Hz External Monitor

When connected to my Alienware AW3225QF 4k 240 Hz monitor with my M2 Max MacBook Pro, I encounter a kernel panic and a system crash at least once every 2 days. Is this issue specific to the high resolution and refresh rate combo?


panic(cpu 0 caller 0xfffffe001836b410): DCPEXT2 PANIC - apt firmware: dual\_pipe.c:180 sync\_pipe\_end\_of\_config() -- - iomfb\_mailbox(68) apt firmware: dual\_pipe.c:180 sync\_pipe\_end\_of\_config() -- RTKit: RTKit-2758.1.1.release - Client: AppleDCP-811.1.1\~754-t602xdcp.RELEASE !UUID: a1000010-2140-1ed5-a178-80d201401ed5 ASLR slide: 0x000000000021d000 Time: 0x000000090ceeff39



MacBook Pro 16″, macOS 15.0

Posted on Oct 18, 2024 4:37 AM

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Posted on Jan 28, 2025 7:53 AM

I have a ROG PG32UCDM with firmware MCM108 and a Mac mini m4 pro. I connected the monitor with a high quality Thunderbolt 4 usb-c cable so I am certain it is not the cable's problem. This issue still exist on macOS 15.3. As long as I set the monitor refresh rate to 240Hz or 48-240Hz, a kernel panic will occur once a while, especially when mac mini was under heavy load such as running video games. this never happened when I set the monitor refresh rate to 120Hz.

99 replies

Jan 28, 2025 6:41 AM in response to Infilak

Debugging and Reporting steps:

Make certain you have applied all available software updates, because no one is willing to debug a problem that might have been seen and solved already.


Then you need to go through the 'regular" steps to eliminate added software as the cause of the problem:


• Run In Safe Mode, where no third-party add-ons are loaded

• create a new "clean" User account, and run with that to eliminate contamination in your regular User account

• run the diagnostic to check for GROSS issues. "no fault found" is not the same as "all is well".


[You already did this step.]

If you are seeing kernel panics, post a panic report. Some panic-reasons suggest a Hardware issue. There is a procedure that can allow you to find those reports to post one. Ask for assistance if you need it.


if you take it to an Apple service provider first, they CAN run their diagnostics, which are a bit more comprehensive that the User diagnostics. In the very small amount of time they are run, “No faults detected” still does not mean “All is Well” but at least there are no detected GROSS problems. Unless they can find a fault, they will return your computer unchanged.


Genius Bar technicians are NOT trained to read panic reports and computer logs. When you present your computer at the Genius Bar with the expectation of a quote to repair it, you must generally meet these criteria:


• your Mac won't do anything

• your Mac fails diagnostics

• your Mac has a problem you can repeatably demonstrate on demand

one other oddball case:

• Apple online support has DIRECTED a Service Provider to replace specific components inside your Mac, such as the mainboard or display. Bring proof, such as case number.


The telephone support people are more likely to work with you. They will insist that you go through the motions to eliminate software issues. But when they get to the end of their list, you should insist on having your problem escalated to a specialist. Specialists are more likely to actually read your panic reports, and to agree this is a problem and DIRECT an Apple service provider to swap things (likely mainboard) for a new one.


You MUST have a Trusted backup before submitting your Mac for service. if the mainboard is swapped out, the boot drive will be swapped out as well, and you will not get your files back.

Aug 1, 2025 3:24 AM in response to Infilak

I am having the same issue with the new Asus PA32UCDM using the Thunderbold 4 connection. I've tried the included TB4 Cable and the Apple TB5 Cable. In the beginning it always crashed after changing the resolution or enabling HDR, after resetting the monitor to factory settings it has been running stable for a few days. Will try and see if using it with 120Hz instead of 240Hz will help.

Dec 15, 2024 7:35 AM in response to themoodster

themoodster wrote:

Have not seen a single crash since setting it to 120hz


That is quite unusual, because the portion of your Mac that is crashing (the display co-processor) is NOT involved in screen-redraw., and should not be impacted by changes in refresh rate.


Perhaps this is indeed a very complex co-processor interaction with high speed timing implications.


Once the image of the screen has been drawn/rendered into the display-buffer using the Display Co-processor, a Rasterizer/DisplayGenerator automaton re-sends a screenful of display data, every refresh interval. The display Co-processor does not need to be used unless/until the screen changes.


Because there is so much data in one screen, being sent so fast, handling of these data using the processor or co-processor alone is impossible, and can not be done that way.

Sep 25, 2025 2:13 PM in response to Grant Bennet-Alder

Kernel Panic Reports are stored in the Folder at:

/Library/Logs/DiagnosticReports


If you copy and paste that string into:

Finder > Go menu > Go to Folder


it will take you to the Folder where those reports are stored.


Kernel panic reports are named with Date&Time and start or end in ‘panic’

If you find one, please post as much as you can here, by using the “additional text” Icon in the reply footer (looks like a paper with writing). (Once the report devolves into incessant software-names or incessant Base-64 dumps with lots of AAAAAA lines, you are done.)


Please don’t post more about 20 lines of any other types of reports — they are interminable, and any information useful for this purpose is on the first screenful.


Jul 18, 2025 10:02 AM in response to subvoxel

subvoxel wrote:

Has anyone tried the macOS Tahoe beta? That's my only remaining hope...

FYI, if anyone is using the Tahoe beta, they are not allowed to publicly discuss it (good or bad). You will need to wait until Tahoe is officially released to the public later this year.


@Grant is absolutely correct that the best way to help Apple fix the issue is by finding a way of reproducing the failure on demand or at least make the failure more easily repeatable and pass that information on to Apple. I can tell you from years of personal experience with diagnosing & troubleshooting computer issues, this is the necessary first step before a solution or cause can be discovered.


And everyone with this display issue should already have cases open with Apple support which have been given over to their higher level support & engineers once the basic frontline troubleshooting ends without resolving the problem. Without enough people doing this, it will take Apple a long time (if ever) to resolve it....assuming users have even gotten that far so Apple is even aware the issue exists.

Sep 25, 2025 9:00 PM in response to Infilak

I did talk to my business team in EU.

in order to get that fixed talk you your local Apple Store and bring the 240hz monitor with you to reproduce it. They have internal ticket system to address this.

unfortunately I can’t do it in next months as I am

on Tavel.

if you are a business client contact us local sales store and please do it as the apple deva can’t reproduce it for some reason.

Kernel Panic With 4k 240 Hz External Monitor

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