BSOD - Dell XPS 17 (l702x) - W7 Ult 64-bit - Various bug check values

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  1. Posts : 29
    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit Service Pack 1
    Thread Starter
       #41

    Still no BSOD. Thanks for the advice.

    Do you think it would be okay to disable verifier now?
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 2,393
    Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate: x64 (SP1)
       #42

    Yes, you can disable verifier. :)
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 29
    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit Service Pack 1
    Thread Starter
       #43

    FredeGail said:
    Yes, you can disable verifier. :)
    Okay, great stuff.

    Well I haven't had a BSOD yet so it's looking good. I think another week without incident and we can mark it solved.

    Cheers,
    Shaun
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 2,393
    Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate: x64 (SP1)
       #44

    Great news Shaun!
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 29
    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit Service Pack 1
    Thread Starter
       #45

    Okay, well it's the 14th Oct now and I still haven't had a BSOD so I'm going to mark this one as solved.

    I did do one further thing that may/may not have helped and that was to disabled hardware accelleration for Flash (Adobe Community: How do I disable or enable hardware acceleration?).

    Many thanks for your guidance and assistance FredeGail - after many frustrating months of BSOD's and getting to a point of not trusting my laptop to be reliable and losing lots of time/work - it is good to be back up to full speed and devoid of the BSOD plague.

    Excellent site/resource that I will recommend to anyone in a similar situation.

    Cheers,
    Shaun
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 2,393
    Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate: x64 (SP1)
       #46

    I'm very happy you got it sorted mate.

    Jolly good!
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 29
    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit Service Pack 1
    Thread Starter
       #47

    Update: 02-11-2012 - The BSODs re-appeared and after one crash in particular I couldn't get my laptop to the Windows desktop.

    I fitted a spare Kingston SSD (the XPS17 has two HDD slots), made it the boot drive in the BIOS and installed Windows 7 Ultimate afresh (to rule out the original Samsung SSD).

    Almost straight away - with a completely fresh install to a different SSD - I started to get BSODs, lots of them, so I persisted with rebooting and taking small steps forward to the point where I could install Dell's recommended drivers. That helped and the regularity of the BSODs decreased, but they were still happening at the rate of three or four per evening and making the laptop difficult to use.

    I was on the verge of calling Dell support when I noticed Windows 8 was available at a large discount so took a punt to see if Windows 8 would solve the problem and bought the upgrade.

    Installed it this morning and hey presto, no more BSODs.

    This leads me to conclude that all of my BSOD problems have been the result of a corrupt Windows 7 installation disc.

    I've had Windows 8 running on the laptop all day and it has performed flawlessley and at double the speed it did before so I think this is re-solved, but with a different solution (and a different cause by the look of it!!).

    Just wanted to post a follow-up and explain that it wasn't the laptop but the software that was the problem.

    Cheers,
    Shaun
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 2,393
    Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate: x64 (SP1)
       #48

    I'm glad you found a solution Shaun. Also it's most appreciated you're taking time to write your steps and what you've done to get there!

    Best Regards,
    Frederik.
      My Computer


 
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