BSOD of this & that
#17
Posted 29 May 2012 - 08:48 PM
Yep that would be the one. I can see even with it turning there looks to be some buildup on the fan.
#18
Posted 29 May 2012 - 08:49 PM
I would like to see it a couple of degrees lower especially if you are not stressing it.
#21
Posted 30 May 2012 - 06:51 AM
dunno? Just blew a lot of air into it until I seen no more dust come out. Gonna monitor it and see how it acts. Its back together in the cabinet and stayed at that temp all night. If it holds up Im going to guess it was the temp of vid card causing all the BSOD that had to do with the vid card. Thanks for your help
#22
Posted 30 May 2012 - 08:10 AM
Yes please let me know how it works and if there is anymore BSOD's please post the error code.
#23
Posted 30 May 2012 - 04:39 PM
Still happening.....got a couple this morning. 0x50 win32k.sys. while watching some videos. I quit watching them and it stopped. So far this evening I got a 0x24. Noticed the temp creeping back up to 65. Restarted out of cabinet and got it lowered back to 59-61 range then got a 0xFC while watching a video on ESPN.
#24
Posted 30 May 2012 - 04:46 PM
050 error message indicates the below.
0x00000050: PAGE_FAULT_IN_NONPAGED_AREA
Of all the possibilities I am guessing it is video memory causing this.
If the second one you referenced is 024 then this is what it says.
I don't believe this is the issue but just in case try doing the below and let me know if it finds anything.
Tutorial for running chkdsk in Vista\Win 7 located HERE.
0x00000050: PAGE_FAULT_IN_NONPAGED_AREA
Quote
(Click to consult the online MSDN article.)
Requested data was not in memory. An invalid system memory address was referenced. Defective memory (including main memory, L2 RAM cache, video RAM) or incompatible software (including remote control and antivirus software) might cause this Stop message, as may other hardware problems (e.g., incorrect SCSI termination or a flawed PCI card).
Requested data was not in memory. An invalid system memory address was referenced. Defective memory (including main memory, L2 RAM cache, video RAM) or incompatible software (including remote control and antivirus software) might cause this Stop message, as may other hardware problems (e.g., incorrect SCSI termination or a flawed PCI card).
Of all the possibilities I am guessing it is video memory causing this.
If the second one you referenced is 024 then this is what it says.
Quote
0x00000024: NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM
A problem occurred within NTFS.SYS, the driver file that allows the system to read and write to NTFS file system drives. There may be a physical problem with the disk, or an Interrupt Request Packet (IRP) may be corrupted. Other common causes include heavy hard drive fragmentation, heavy file I/O, problems with some types of drive-mirroring software, or some antivirus software. I suggest running ChkDsk or ScanDisk as a first step; then disable all file system filters such as virus scanners, firewall software, or backup utilities. Check the file properties of NTFS.SYS to ensure it matches the current OS or SP version. Update all disk, tape backup, CD-ROM, or removable device drivers to the most current versions.
A problem occurred within NTFS.SYS, the driver file that allows the system to read and write to NTFS file system drives. There may be a physical problem with the disk, or an Interrupt Request Packet (IRP) may be corrupted. Other common causes include heavy hard drive fragmentation, heavy file I/O, problems with some types of drive-mirroring software, or some antivirus software. I suggest running ChkDsk or ScanDisk as a first step; then disable all file system filters such as virus scanners, firewall software, or backup utilities. Check the file properties of NTFS.SYS to ensure it matches the current OS or SP version. Update all disk, tape backup, CD-ROM, or removable device drivers to the most current versions.
I don't believe this is the issue but just in case try doing the below and let me know if it finds anything.
Tutorial for running chkdsk in Vista\Win 7 located HERE.
#25
Posted 26 June 2012 - 03:51 PM
Are you still having problems with your issue?
It has been 27 days since your last response and I was wondering if the issue has been resolved?
If so can you explain how it was resolved so others may be able to fix it if they have the same issue.
If not please let us know and we can continue with helping you to resolve the issue.
It has been 27 days since your last response and I was wondering if the issue has been resolved?
If so can you explain how it was resolved so others may be able to fix it if they have the same issue.
If not please let us know and we can continue with helping you to resolve the issue.
#26
Posted 26 June 2012 - 05:07 PM
yea still having problems for the most part. Just haven't had much time to mess with it. It runs fine under normal use but when games or videos are played it shuts off.
#27
Posted 26 June 2012 - 05:31 PM
With that info I am willing to bet it is either your video or your power supply causing all this.
#28
Posted 27 June 2012 - 01:25 AM
I have had to replace the power supply before. I been thinking it the video card. May need to try a different browser. Firefox seems to be putting the memory under a heavy load.
#30
Posted 02 July 2012 - 07:06 PM
Did a search on why it BSOD during every video I watch and it said to disable hardware acceleration for adobe flash player. Did that and havent changed anything else, So far so good.......


