MSFN Forum: New PC problems - BSOD every day...please help :( Minidumps attached - MSFN Forum

Jump to content



Page 1 of 1
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

New PC problems - BSOD every day...please help :( Minidumps attached Could this be a hardware problem or software/drivers issue? Rate Topic: -----

#1 User is offline   TheRed 

  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 2
  • Joined: 12-September 10
  • OS:Windows 7 x64
  • Country: Country Flag

Posted 12 September 2010 - 01:53 PM

Hello everyone,

First of all, I am new here to MSFN.org and was recommended by a friend to post my new PC problems here as there are lots of PC experts that could help me pinpoint the cause of the problem.

This new PC was built only 1 week ago, and everyday during the week, I've encountered at least 1 BSOD. There was even a day when there were constant and repetitive BSODs, and it was coincidently when I enabled "ATI LCD Overdrive" and until I disabled it, the problem seems to stop for the day--but continues for the next day, albeit only once and not constant/repetitive. I am not sure if its the video card, the ATI drivers, or something else.

Today, I noticed that even though I started up StarCraft II, my CPU load was only 1-3% and my GPU load was oddly 0%, even though it get to Bnet and Campaign screen. Then SCII crashes and reports corruption when loading campaign. Then 1 or 2 minutes after that, BSOD comes up. I used CPUID Hardware Monitor for the values--and load values from Windows for the CPU seems to compliment this. How come the values reporting was off? Could it be the Motherboard?

It was not just playing games that BSOD comes up, it was when doing basic browsing/email/office too--So I'm not sure if its entirely a problem that is related to gaming or a problem in general.

My PC Specs are:

Mainboard : BIOSTAR Group A770E3
Chipset : AMD RD770
Processor : AMD Athlon II X4 635 @ 2900MHz
Physical Memory : 4096MB (2 x 2048 DDR3-SDRAM )
Video Card : ATI Radeon HD 5700 Series (5770)
Hard Disk : Western Digital WD10EALS-00Z8A0 ATA Device (1000GB)
DVD-Rom Drive : HL-DT-ST DVDRAM GSA-4167B
Monitor Type : P244W - 24 inches
Network Card : Realtek Semiconductor RTL8168/8111 PCIe Gigabit Ethernet Adapter
Operating System : Windows 7 Ultimate Professional Media Center 6.01.7600 (64-bit)
DirectX : Version 11.00

Anyhow, the Minidumps is here: http://www.mediafire...nmqxc8w21l6ka12

I have used WinDbg but they mostly says its caused by "ntfs.sys" or "ntoskrnl.exe", but I don't know how to analyze these Minidumps. I'd greatly appreciate if you could help me analyze these Minidumps and what could be the cause of these BSOD problems?

Thank you very much for your help!!

This post has been edited by TheRed: 12 September 2010 - 01:55 PM



#2 User is offline   gamehead200 

  • SEARCH!!! SEARCH!!!
  • Group: Super Moderator
  • Posts: 7,019
  • Joined: 02-September 02
  • OS:Windows 7 x64
  • Country: Country Flag

Posted 12 September 2010 - 03:47 PM

Welcome to MSFN! We can definitely help you out. First off, the minidump won't be of much help, so I'd suggesting creating a full memory dump if the BSOD ever happens again (instructions here: http://www.msfn.org/...g-memory-dumps/). This will help us further analyze the cause of the problem.

#3 User is offline   puntoMX 

  • n00b of Masters and Vice Versa
  • Group: Super Moderator
  • Posts: 4,686
  • Joined: 28-June 04
  • OS:Windows 7 x64
  • Country: Country Flag

Posted 12 September 2010 - 10:00 PM

Welcome to the Forums.

Sounds like you have a not well cooled CPU or RAM that doesn't work as it should. How do you keep the CPU and other components cooled? Any pictures? RAM is easy to test with MEMtest x86 that you can download for free and install on a USB stick. But first, check the CPU cooler contact with the CPU.

#4 User is offline   TheRed 

  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 2
  • Joined: 12-September 10
  • OS:Windows 7 x64
  • Country: Country Flag

Posted 13 September 2010 - 06:14 PM

View Postgamehead200, on 12 September 2010 - 03:47 PM, said:

Welcome to MSFN! We can definitely help you out. First off, the minidump won't be of much help, so I'd suggesting creating a full memory dump if the BSOD ever happens again (instructions here: http://www.msfn.org/...g-memory-dumps/). This will help us further analyze the cause of the problem.



View PostpuntoMX, on 12 September 2010 - 10:00 PM, said:

Welcome to the Forums.

Sounds like you have a not well cooled CPU or RAM that doesn't work as it should. How do you keep the CPU and other components cooled? Any pictures? RAM is easy to test with MEMtest x86 that you can download for free and install on a USB stick. But first, check the CPU cooler contact with the CPU.


Hey, Thanks for the welcome!!

My CPU runs pretty cool--around 40-45*C when normal operation, and max 55*C when playing games and high demand stuff. I will try the Full Dump and the MEMtest as well. Will get back with results asap. But from the Minidumps, have you guys found out about anything or was the data too limited?

Another funny thing just happened--I shut down my computer into Hibernation last night, and in the morning after I go, it automatically turn on, and goes on to blue screen--even though power was completely off! It was on and freezes with no video output--just black screen--when I got home and after 12 hours freezing like that. What's going on ?

#5 User is offline   engmod 

  • Newbie
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 34
  • Joined: 09-December 08

Posted 13 September 2010 - 10:00 PM

Don't use hibernation for the moment, wait till we have finished with the BSOD's.

#6 User is offline   Tripredacus 

  • K-Mart-ian Legend
  • Group: Super Moderator
  • Posts: 7,349
  • Joined: 28-April 06
  • OS:Windows 7 x86
  • Country: Country Flag

Posted 15 September 2010 - 10:01 AM

View PostTheRed, on 13 September 2010 - 06:14 PM, said:

But from the Minidumps, have you guys found out about anything or was the data too limited?


Minidumps are typically useless for determining the root cause of an BSOD for troubleshooting purposes. This is why we always ask for the full dump. Minidumps are typically used for metrics and usually only have almost the same info you can find in Event Viewer.

#7 User is offline   ryanbenjamin 

  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 8
  • Joined: 08-September 10
  • OS:none specified
  • Country: Country Flag

Posted 15 September 2010 - 09:23 PM

I think hibernation will remove the error.

#8 User is offline   Zxian 

  • Scroll up - see the Google bar?
  • Group: Super Moderator
  • Posts: 5,066
  • Joined: 30-September 04
  • OS:none specified
  • Country: Country Flag

Posted 24 September 2010 - 01:57 PM

I was having similar troubles recently after waking my system from sleep or hibernation. Loading StarCraftII or World of Warcraft would usually result in a lockup, followed by a BSOD pointing at the ATI drivers. I'm not sure if ATI's latest drivers are playing nicely with that feature on the latest cards.

See if the trouble continues after you stop using sleep/hibernate for a while. Furthermore, run a CHKDSK on your system drive. If, for some reason, the system files became corrupt, it could cause instability like this.

Share this topic:


Page 1 of 1
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

1 User(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users



All trademarks mentioned on this page are the property of their respective owners
Copyright © 2001 - 2011 msfn.org
Privacy Policy