The Nvidia
driver is the cause (nvlddmkm.sys)
Uninstall your current display
drivers and use driver sweeper to remove leftover driver files
Guru3D - Driver Sweeper
Then reinstall the
latest drivers
Drivers - Download NVIDIA Drivers
Dumps indicate 117 BC which is mainly caused by defective GPU/RAM
As BC117 is similar to BC116 take a look at this thread
STOP 0x116: VIDEO_TDR_ERROR troubleshooting Code:
BugCheck 117, {fffffa800b1624e0, fffff880101bd344, 0, 0}
Unable to load image nvlddmkm.sys, Win32 error 0n2
*** WARNING: Unable to verify timestamp for nvlddmkm.sys
*** ERROR: Module load completed but symbols could not be loaded for nvlddmkm.sys
Probably caused by : nvlddmkm.sys ( nvlddmkm+156344 ) ASACPI.sys the 2005 version is a huge cause of BSOD's Quote:
The 2005 version of this driver is a known BSOD cause.
Please visit this link:
ASUSTeK Computer Inc.-Support- download_item_mkt
Scroll down to the Utilities category, then scroll down to the "ATK0110 driver for WindowsXP/Vista/Windows 7 32&64-bit " (it's about the 8th item down).
Download and install it.
Go to C:\Windows\System32\drivers to check and make sure that the ASACPI.sys file is date stamped from 2009 or 2010 (NOT 2005).
Code:
ASACPI.sys fffff880`047d5000 fffff080`047dd000 0xfffff80000008000 0x42476c4c 28/03/2005 06:30:36
Remove Asus PC Probe, it uses an outdated driver
Code:
Mo3Fltr.sys fffff880`066bc000 fffff880`066bf200 0x00003200 0x48d1c1fd 18/09/2008 06:50:37
Update your Intel Matrix Storage driver
http://www.intel.com/support/detect.htm Code:
iaStorV.sys fffff880`0124b000 fffff880`01369000 0x0011e000 0x49dcd76d 08/04/2009 20:57:17