BSOD 0x124 occurring seemingly randomly - very frequent

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  1. Posts : 12
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
       #1

    BSOD 0x124 occurring seemingly randomly - very frequent


    Is Windows 7 . . .
    - x86 (32-bit) or x64 ? 64-bit
    - the original installed OS on the system? No - Homebuilt computer
    - an OEM or full retail version? Full Retail

    - What is the age of system (hardware)? roughly 3 years - different components are different ages
    - What is the age of OS installation (have you re-installed the OS?) approximately 8 months

    I haven't recently changed any hardware, so I'm not sure where to start - I ran the memory test overnight and found no errors, I ran a video card stress test for about an hour with no issues, my HD's both sound fine (I know that's not the only symptom, but just to put that out there).

    I did have two of these memory sticks running in dual channel, but when I initially installed Win7 it would hang at the install screen and it ended up being because of one of the sticks of memory (which is why I'm only running one 2GB stick now), so that was my first thought - but it ran fine for months on this stick, and the memory test ran fine so I'm steering away from this.

    I get this error very frequently, and almost always on the first boot of the session (if I wait a couple hours I boot it and it freezes at boot and then loads fine the second time).

    I'm at college so I don't have another computer I can pull parts from (or the Win7 disc), so I was hoping that somewhere hidden in these files it might give a hint as to what is wrong... Please let me know if I left something out that will help!

    Thank you in advance for any help you can provide!

    Cody


    edit: Updated system specs
    Last edited by c0dy; 31 Aug 2011 at 22:45.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 28,845
    Win 8 Release candidate 8400
       #2

    c0dy said:
    Is Windows 7 . . .
    - x86 (32-bit) or x64 ? 64-bit
    - the original installed OS on the system? No - Homebuilt computer
    - an OEM or full retail version? Full Retail

    - What is the age of system (hardware)? roughly 3 years - different components are different ages
    - What is the age of OS installation (have you re-installed the OS?) approximately 8 months

    I haven't recently changed any hardware, so I'm not sure where to start - I ran the memory test overnight and found no errors, I ran a video card stress test for about an hour with no issues, my HD's both sound fine (I know that's not the only symptom, but just to put that out there).

    I did have two of these memory sticks running in dual channel, but when I initially installed Win7 it would hang at the install screen and it ended up being because of one of the sticks of memory (which is why I'm only running one 2GB stick now), so that was my first thought - but it ran fine for months on this stick, and the memory test ran fine so I'm steering away from this.

    I get this error very frequently, and almost always on the first boot of the session (if I wait a couple hours I boot it and it freezes at boot and then loads fine the second time).

    I'm at college so I don't have another computer I can pull parts from (or the Win7 disc), so I was hoping that somewhere hidden in these files it might give a hint as to what is wrong... Please let me know if I left something out that will help!

    Thank you in advance for any help you can provide!

    Cody


    edit: Updated system specs

    Cody hi and welcome


    this is almost certainly hardware and probably RAM or CPU. The only thing I can see in software that might do this is your Avast.

    I assume you arent overclocking or running a raid.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 12
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
    Thread Starter
       #3

    That's correct, and my memory is actually running below spec right now rather than having the timings set to it's max. I will uninstall avast for a while and see if the error persists. Though mentioning RAM is a likely culprit, I'm inclined to think that (per the edit I made: "I did have two of these memory sticks running in dual channel, but when I initially installed Windows 7 it would hang at the install screen and it ended up being because of one of the sticks of memory (which is why I'm only running one 2GB stick now), so that was my first thought - but it ran fine for months on this stick, and the memory test ran fine so I'm steering away from this.").

    Also, my Avast had an error updating for about two days, a week or so ago (though this problem has been ongoing for at least a month), that may also be a symptom.

    I appreciate your help!

    edit:
    Also, I read in a similar thread to mine about drivers, so I updated my video card drivers as well (though I hadn't touched those around the time it started BSODing)
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 12
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
    Thread Starter
       #4

    So, after updating the display drivers and uninstalling Avast! last night, my computer ran for about 3 hours (I don't know the last time it did that without freezing), even while running stress tests (P95, etc). It did freeze finally, while no stress tests were running, so I'm not sure what it was attributed to - but it was a different error this time (0x101 I believe). It just froze again while starting up (it didn't even post the first time, so I reset and it posted and started up). This leads me to believe it is the hardware, and not avast. I may have access to memory here shortly, so I will swap that out and see if it persists and if it doesn't (hopefully), I'll know! If not, it sounds like you believe it is the CPU - is that correct? Is that a guess, or is that at least loosely based off of the error I received?

    Thanks again,
    Cody
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 28,845
    Win 8 Release candidate 8400
       #5

    c0dy said:
    So, after updating the display drivers and uninstalling Avast! last night, my computer ran for about 3 hours (I don't know the last time it did that without freezing), even while running stress tests (P95, etc). It did freeze finally, while no stress tests were running, so I'm not sure what it was attributed to - but it was a different error this time (0x101 I believe). It just froze again while starting up (it didn't even post the first time, so I reset and it posted and started up). This leads me to believe it is the hardware, and not avast. I may have access to memory here shortly, so I will swap that out and see if it persists and if it doesn't (hopefully), I'll know! If not, it sounds like you believe it is the CPU - is that correct? Is that a guess, or is that at least loosely based off of the error I received?

    Thanks again,
    Cody

    Cody if your error was "101" it would explain much


    Best advice that I've seen about this error (from here: https://www.sevenforums.com/crashes-d...tml#post356791 )
    What you're looking for will be in one of the following categories:

    a) BIOS bug
    b) a driver whose activity is causing the target processor to lock up
    c) a hardware defect (temperature, voltage, dust, RFI, outright borkedness...)
    So, check the drivers
    Then check the inside of the case (temperature, voltage, dust, etc).
    Then run some hardware stress tests

    Try this free video stress test: FurMark: VGA Stress Test, Graphics Card and GPU Stability Test, Burn-in Test, OpenGL Benchmark and GPU Temperature | oZone3D.Net
    Try this free stress test: Free Software - GIMPS
    Prime95 Setup:
    - extract the contents of the zip file to a location of your choice
    - double click on the executable file
    - select "Just stress testing"
    - select the "Blend" test. If you've already run MemTest overnight you may want to run the "Small FFTs" test instead.
    - "Number of torture test threads to run" should equal the number of CPU's times 2 (if you're using hyperthreading).
    The easiest way to figure this out is to go to Task Manager...Performance tab - and see the number of boxes under CPU Usage History
    Then run the test for 6 to 24 hours - or until you get errors (whichever comes first).
    The Test selection box and the stress.txt file describes what components that the program stresses.
    Then try replacing parts.
    Then look up the versions of your BIOS to see what changes were done.[/QUOTE]
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 12
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
    Thread Starter
       #6

    While running Prime95 I get the following (for core 2) - attached.

    To me, this points to a faulty core on my processor (meaning I need to replace the CPU). Based on the errors I posted, would you agree with that?
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 28,845
    Win 8 Release candidate 8400
       #7

    c0dy said:
    While running Prime95 I get the following (for core 2) - attached.

    To me, this points to a faulty core on my processor (meaning I need to replace the CPU). Based on the errors I posted, would you agree with that?
    It does seem like that. It is obviously a hardware issue. Have you checked the BIOS, and voltages?
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 12
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
    Thread Starter
       #8

    I updated my BIOS (though I used the old bios for a couple years with zero issue) - I checked all settings in BIOS, eased my RAM timings (though now I know it isn't my RAM), I cannot change CPU voltage, and my memory V was properly set. I cleaned the case of dust... Was there something else about the voltage I should be looking at? I'm looking at an Athlon II x3 / Motherboard setup on Newegg that I will buy if necessary - I just want to make sure I have this narrowed down as much as possible so I decrease my chances of buying that and still having issue.
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 28,845
    Win 8 Release candidate 8400
       #9

    c0dy said:
    I updated my BIOS (though I used the old bios for a couple years with zero issue) - I checked all settings in BIOS, eased my RAM timings (though now I know it isn't my RAM), I cannot change CPU voltage, and my memory V was properly set. I cleaned the case of dust... Was there something else about the voltage I should be looking at? I'm looking at an Athlon II x3 / Motherboard setup on Newegg that I will buy if necessary - I just want to make sure I have this narrowed down as much as possible so I decrease my chances of buying that and still having issue.
    Have you checked the Temps?
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 12
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
    Thread Starter
       #10

    My processor maxed at about 145f and held there. My video card was at 170 I believe, but no errors on that test. They both returned to normal very quickly after exiting the stress tests.
      My Computer


 
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