BSOD problem that seems to stem from network usage


  1. Posts : 3
    Windows 7 home premium 64bit.
       #1

    BSOD problem that seems to stem from network usage


    Hello. So, I've encountered a rather interesting BSOD problem on my new custom built computer. I've had problems with BSODs before, but nothing that I haven't been able to fix myself. But this really mystifies me.

    About a week ago this new computer started getting BSODs when doing network intensive tasks(when dowloading games, streaming videos etc.). I have googled my BSODs and it seemed to be the built in killer network adapter that was causing these problems. And since then I've tried a lot of things, including updating the driver and installing the standalone driver without the killer software suitem, updating bios, etc. Still the BSODs keep coming.. And since I am not by any means a computer software expert I thought I would try this forum.

    I used dm log collector to collect my data and will be attaching them to this post.

    Any help will be greatly appreciated. It seems I won't be able to fix this problem myself.

    Thanks in advance.

    Joseph
    Last edited by jerseph; 12 Sep 2014 at 10:52.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 1,449
    Windows 7 ultimate 64-bit
       #2

    If you can; try running a elevated command prompt and then type sfc /scannow and try and get it to scan for possible integrity violations within the windows structure. Also; despite the fact that what you googled showed that it was possibly your network adapter; I would try running memtest86+ to scan for any ram issues. go here and download the most recent version of memtest86+ to a flash drive and let it run a thorough scan and see it comes back with anything.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 3
    Windows 7 home premium 64bit.
    Thread Starter
       #3

    matts6887 said:
    If you can; try running a elevated command prompt and then type sfc /scannow and try and get it to scan for possible integrity violations within the windows structure. Also; despite the fact that what you googled showed that it was possibly your network adapter; I would try running memtest86+ to scan for any ram issues. go here and download the most recent version of memtest86+ to a flash drive and let it run a thorough scan and see it comes back with anything.
    Hello, I did perform the scan for integrity violations, and that came back clean, so I guess that's not the problem. I can try running memtest tonight. In the meantime, is there anything in the dmp:s that I've missed? Can it be something other than the network adapter?
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 3
    Windows 7 home premium 64bit.
    Thread Starter
       #4

    So I ran memtest86 all night here, 8 passes. 0 errors. So it's not the RAM.
      My Computer


 

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