New
#1
It Guy beaten
Windows 7 PRO
x64 OEM from MWAVE
3 year hardware
6 months of win 7 pro
.Dmp attached What is going wrong??
Please any info would be great
Windows 7 PRO
x64 OEM from MWAVE
3 year hardware
6 months of win 7 pro
.Dmp attached What is going wrong??
Please any info would be great
Hi,welcome to SF :)
Ur minidump points to win32k.sys that error it may caused by SuperCopier.
So please do the follows,
Download and install CCleaner - Optimization and Cleaning - Free Download
Uninstall SuperCopier,clean registry with ccleaner,restart.
-------------------
Please post back with any results!
Still Blue screens here are the new logs.
Thanks for your help. Any more would be Great!!
Once this is fixed i am thinking i might learn how to debug myself are there any sites i can check to learn how to get answers from these .dmp myself??
or ones that could be recomended?
Cheers Guys
I am using blue screen view already, Couldnt manage to sort out this problem so i thought i might as well take the next step....
I cant even figure out how the first dumps pointed to super copier even though it wasnt the cause...?
Sorry I Should probabily have asked if there was any new info in the Dump files after i followed
this instruction Uninstall SuperCopier,clean registry with ccleaner,restart.
Newest is related to memory corruption from an unknown driver (ipodservice suspect) Please run these.
Download a copy of Memtest86 and burn the ISO to a CD using Iso Recorder or another ISO burning program.
Boot from the CD, and leave it running for at least 5 or 6 passes.
Just remember, any time Memtest reports errors, it can be either bad RAM or a bad motherboard slot.
Test the sticks individually, and if you find a good one, test it in all slots.
Driver verifier
I'd suggest that you first backup your stuff and then make sure you've got access to another computer so you can contact us if problems arise. Then make a System Restore point (so you can restore the system using the Vista/Win7 Startup Repair feature).
In Windows 7 you can make a Startup Repair disk by going to Start....All Programs...Maintenance...Create a System Repair Disc - with Windows Vista you'll have to use your installation disk or the "Repair your computer" option at the top of the Safe Mode menu .
Then, here's the procedure:
- Go to Start and type in "verifier" (without the quotes) and press Enter
- Select "Create custom settings (for code developers)" and click "Next"
- Select "Select individual settings from a full list" and click "Next"
- Select everything EXCEPT FOR "Low Resource Simulation" and click "Next"
- Select "Select driver names from a list" and click "Next"
Then select all drivers NOT provided by Microsoft and click "Next"
- Select "Finish" on the next page.
Reboot the system and wait for it to crash to the Blue Screen. Continue to use your system normally, and if you know what causes the crash, do that repeatedly. The objective here is to get the system to crash because Driver Verifier is stressing the drivers out. If it doesn't crash for you, then let it run for at least 36 hours of continuous operation (an estimate on my part).
If you can't get into Windows because it crashes too soon, try it in Safe Mode.
If you can't get into Safe Mode, try using System Restore from your installation DVD to set the system back to the previous restore point that you created.
Ok A few things I have tried tried ram with no faults removed 1 stick seems to make it bsod less but couldnt get a bad result from memtest over the 3 or 4 I have already done tried diffrent combinations and diffrent sticks (Borrowed from work)
verifier with testing all did not fault
verifier /reset done after about 4 reboots with no BSOD....
Im pretty stumped, I will try this stuff again tonight but i am thinking the result wont change....