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Hi,
i was wondering if anybody resolved this issue in one definite way.. i tried the suggestions listed to no avail.. the issue is exactly the same as listed here. i'd appreciate input, thanks!
Hi,
i was wondering if anybody resolved this issue in one definite way.. i tried the suggestions listed to no avail.. the issue is exactly the same as listed here. i'd appreciate input, thanks!
Hi Chevell,
I have the same problem right now and I'm wondering if your solution has been working allright? Also - Isn't it dangerous to encrease the voltage for the equipment or is this something that normally can be done? Can updating bios help?
I'm a bit new to this and so I feel I need to know more. Hope you can help me with this. I would appreciate it a lot.
Best regards/
Chris
yes, a good question, and also.. do all three, memory.. FSB and CPU voltage have to be increased or only one will do the trick?
This same problem has been occuring for me, usually after attempting to come out of sleep. I thought it was hibernation related, but after turning that feature off using the power management settings, it kept happening.
Just tried the command prompt directions given in an earlier post for turning hibernation back on through the command prompt. I'll that for now.
Well I managed to go four days without a crash after doing the command prompt instructions to turn on hibernation, but then got a hard stop today again. No BSOD, but the PC froze complete for a good 5 minutes so I forced a reboot by holding down the power key.
Here's what my event viewer log looks like. All the same type of event.
TechSmith | Screencast.com, online video sharing, Even Viewer 2010-07-31_0959
I'm not too keen on monkeying with voltages and the like. Does anyone else have any ideas for what can be done to fix this problem?
Wow, I owe you a beer. I have had this issue for so long! I even went so far as to completely format my hard drive, reinstall Windows 7. Literally tried everything from swapping power supplies, adding after market coolers to both my cpu and vga card, swapping memory sticks to no avail.
Your command prompt suggestion to enable hibernation fixed my system completely. Have been stable for weeks!
Obviously some sort of bug with Windows 7 and the hibernation feature.
Thanks for sharing your suggestion with fellow Windows 7 users!
To TheUSMarshall - thanks from me, too.
I am the System Admin/Internal Support person for a small software development company in NZ.
We bought a brand new laptop from Dell with 64bit Windows 7 Home Premium installed on it, and it had the rebooting-randomly-with-no-warning-event-ID-41 problem. After a month or so we logged a support call with Dell. They replaced the mainboard and hard disk, but the problem was still present.
We had set the power options to never hibernate and never sleep while on battery, so the situation seemed to be similar.
I found your post and tried it:
powercfg -h on
The problem went away that day!
As usual, Microsoft's web site was absolutely no help at all. There was no inkling of anything like this on their web site (or I couldn't find it, which amounts to the same thing). You would think they would have some clues about their own OS!
I tried the fix that TheUSMarshall said to do. That did not work, does anyone else know how to fix this issue.
Thanks.
After installing Windows 7 SP 1, my system dies every time it sleeps. The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was: 0x000000a0 (0x0000000000000009, 0xffffffffc000000e, 0x0000000000000001, 0x0000000000000000). A dump was saved in: C:\Windows\MEMORY.DMP. Report Id: 030211-83928-01. What causes this?
Tried US Marshall's "powercfg -h on"
Sorry but didn't solve it for me.
Going to try out CHEVELL or CHEV65 ideas and bump the voltage.