BSOD carried over to fresh install of Windows 7. Help.

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  1. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 64
       #1

    BSOD carried over to fresh install of Windows 7. Help.


    One year old system. i2500k P8P67 Pro Asus board with 8GB Corsair RAM and XFX 6970. No other add on cards, 3 hard drives. Ever since originally building the system last January 2011 it has had BSOD when playing games only. Any game, sometimes will not crash for a while ie. weeks, other times repeatedly within hours. Very random. But only with games. Not enough of a pain to really care that much. Did a fresh install of Windows 7 and hoped that would solve my problem. Installed and updated drivers from Asus site for my motherboard, new drivers for anything I could think of. No errors in device manager. Ran memtest86 overnight with no problems. Prime 95 run for 3 hours CPU going to 50C max CPU idles at 26C. GPU generally runs at 90C while playing grahpically intense games. Idles at 40C. Big case, lots of fans, tons of airflow.

    THe common demoniator may be the ASUS AI Suite II (and Steam). All other programs on this install I've not used before. Switched to MSE, etc. Only installed a new game not previously used which led to the recent BSOD after fresh install. At this point I`m a bit stumped.

    Uploaded dump file as per instructions in top post. Any help would be appreciated. My guess is that since it is only happening in games that it is probably the video card, although I have no clue really.

    *edit: Fresh install was done yesterday May 5th
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 64
    Thread Starter
       #2

    On a side note Windows 7 is installed on a SSD, don't know if that matters or not.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 64
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Another BSOD while playing a game. Attached is the new dump file.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 64
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Two more dumps (3 and 4 since fresh install). Any help would be greatly appreciated.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 10,200
    MS Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 64-bit
       #5

    Sumidian,
    I'm not a bsod analysis expert, but there are some general things which I can look at while we await the true bsod experts.

    Install CCleaner:
    CCleaner - PC Optimization and Cleaning - Free Download

    list of STARTUP PROGRAMS

    CCleaner | Tools
    icon | Startup button | Windows tab |
    click on Save to text file button (bottom right side) |
    accept Startup.txt as file name | SAVE button

    list of SCHEDULED TASKS

    CCleaner | Tools
    icon | Startup button | Scheduled Tasks tab |
    click on Save to text file button (bottom right side) |
    enter Scheduled Tasks as File name | Save button

    List of INSTALLED PROGRAMS

    CCleaner | Tools
    icon | Uninstall button |
    click on Save to text file button (bottom right side) |
    accept install.txt as File name | Save button


    UPLOAD the startup.txt file
    UPLOAD the Scheduled Tasks.txt file
    UPLOAD the install.txt file.

    HOW TO UPLOAD
    Post a File or Screenshot in Seven Forums
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 64
    Thread Starter
       #6

    Thanks for replying. I have to go to work but will post those files on my return
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 64
    Thread Starter
       #7

    Here are those three files listed. Thanks again for any help.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 10,200
    MS Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 64-bit
       #8

    WIN | type MSCONFIG | ENTER | STARTUP tab
    uncheck ALL except for:
    Code:
    MSC    "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Security Client\msseces.exe" -hide -runkey
    REBOOT!
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 10,200
    MS Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 64-bit
       #9

    In CCleaner, under Scheduled Tasks, Disable all
    ====================================

    Your install list is amazingly clean:

    You might try without the ASUS AI suite and the Intel Watchdog Timer.

    Let's see what the BSOD experts find.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 11,269
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64 Bit
       #10

    I agree with Karl. Please remove the ASUS AI suite. It provides some software overclocking ability that can cause crashes when it interfaces with the hardware. I also note that you have an SSD. Make sure the following are up to date:
    • The SSD firmware
    • BIOS version
    • Chipset drivers (get from the Chipset manufacturer rather than your motherboard support site; the motherboard support site can help you determine which manufacturer you need)
    • Hard disk Controllers

    The final item leads me to one other possible issue. I see the Marvell controller installed. The latest is supposed to provide support for SSDs and not cause conflicts: update from Marvell - Support. The Marvell controller you installed may cause conflicts with the SSD. If the updated version still does not provide stability with the SSD, uninstall the Marvell Controller.

    You can find the Marvell Controller device in Device Manager under IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers. To fully re-install a driver, use the following steps.
    1. First, download the latest driver. Then do the next steps.
    2. Click Start Menu
    3. Right Click My Computer/Computer
    4. Click Manage
    5. Click Device Manager from the list on the left
    6. Find the device you are trying to uninstall by expanding the appropriate set of devices
    7. Right click the device
    8. Click Uninstall (do not click OK in the dialog box that pops up after hitting Uninstall)
    9. Put a tick in Delete driver software for this device (if this option is available, otherwise just hit OK) and hit OK
    10. Restart your computer only if Windows asks you to.
    11. Install the latest driver for the device.


    Alternatively:
    1. Login as an adminstrative user.
    2. First, download the latest driver. Then do the next steps.
    3. Click Start Menu
    4. Click Control Panel
    5. Click Hardware and Sound
    6. Click Device Manager (the last link under Devices and Printers)
    7. Find the device you are trying to uninstall by expanding the appropriate set of devices
    8. Right click the device
    9. Click Uninstall (do not click OK in the dialog box that pops up after hitting Uninstall)
    10. Put a tick in Delete driver software for this device (if this option is available, otherwise just hit OK) and hit OK
    11. Restart your computer only if Windows asks you to.
    12. Install the latest driver for the device.
      My Computer


 
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