Driver Power State Failure Error Message on Dell XPS 1530


  1. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 Home Premium 32bit
       #1

    Driver Power State Failure Error Message on Dell XPS 1530


    When I tried to put my computer in sleep mode, I got a blue error screen with the bug "Driver Power State Failure." Upon using BlueScreenView, I got this information:

    Dump File 101512-14476-01.dmp

    Crash Time 10/15/2012 9:02:26

    Bug Check String PMDRIVER_POWER_STATE_FAILURE

    Bug Check Code 0x0000009f

    Parameter 1 0x00000003

    Parameter 2 0x85b7a2e0

    Parameter 3 0x83328ae0

    Parameter 4 0x8a1ab868

    Caused By Driver ntkrnlpa.exe

    Caused By Address ntkrnlpa.exe+dee98

    File Description NT Kernel & System

    Product Name Microsoft® Windows® Operating System

    Company Microsoft Corporation

    File Version 6.1.7601.17944 (win7sp1_gdr.120830-0333)

    Processor 32-bit

    Crash Address ntkrnlpa.exe+dee98

    Stack Address 1 ntkrnlpa.exe+c7637

    Stack Address 2 ntkrnlpa.exe+c76b0

    Stack Address 3 ntkrnlpa.exe+79799

    Computer Name

    Full Path C:\Windows\Minidump\101512-14476-01.dmp

    Processors Count 2

    Major Version 15

    Minor Version 7601

    Dump File Size 760,256

    I don't know what kind of system information would be useful in this context, but this is a Dell XPS 1530.

    When looking at the drivers in system info, I have a ton of drivers classified as critical under error control. Can anyone help me troubleshoot this problem? I would greatly appreciate it, and can provide additional information if needed.

      My Computer


  2. Posts : 15,026
    Windows 10 Home 64Bit
       #2
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 Home Premium 32bit
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Diagnostic Tool Results


    Sorry about not reading the rules before posting. I was somewhat frazzled.

    I tried to create a memory dump, but was not asked to restart, and the directions seemed to imply that it was only necessary if prompted. I wasn't sure what the procedure was in attaching it, but saw other users use a .rar extension so I went with that.

    The other program wasn't a problem.

    I have tried running a Chkdsk before (you will see there was another crash sometime in September, I ran the check then) and still ended up with files that could not be repaired. Should I just do a system repair?

    Any advice is appreciated, thank you in advance.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 Home Premium 32bit
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Bloody hell, I can't seem to operate anything well today. Sorry for the repost, my internet is slow and I thought I didn't hit reply.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 15,026
    Windows 10 Home 64Bit
       #5

    Hi, your dump does not load for me. Could you grab it following the instructions again?

    Problematic software:
    Code:
    Start Menu\Programs\McAfee	Public:Start Menu\Programs\McAfee	Public
    Start Menu\Programs\McAfee Security Scan Plus	Public:Start Menu\Programs\McAfee Security Scan Plus	Public
    Start Menu\Programs\Spybot - Search & Destroy	Public:Start Menu\Programs\Spybot - Search & Destroy	Public
    Please uninstall McAfee, it's known to cause BSoDs. Especially in the situation described in yours. Please uninstall SpyBot S&D as well. It's good at finding things but is known to slow down and corrupt the system. Download and install MSE, it's free, light weight and does not cause such problems in the Windows 7 OS. For additional security, the free version of Malware Bytes is the best.


    Run a full scan with both (separately) once downloaded, installed and updated.

    Free up your start-up, keep nothing except MSE.

    Run the System File Checker that scans the integrity of all protected Windows 7 system files and replaces incorrect corrupted, changed/modified, or damaged versions with the correct versions if possible and then run Disk Check on your hard disk for file system errors and bad sectors on it:


    Keep us posted
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 Home Premium 32bit
    Thread Starter
       #6

    Thank you for your response! I think I didn't compress the file properly the first time, but believe this attachment should work.

    What seemed to be the main problem with using sleep/hibernate mode was that my wireless card driver had not been updated in a while. Simply turning it off fixed the problem, as well as updating the driver.

    I also wanted to mention two other problematic programs/drivers for me in the past, for anyone who may come across this thread in their own troubleshooting. I cannot use the newest version of iTunes without having internet connectivity problems, and the device driver for a WD 1TB external hard drive I had would cause my computer to freeze and become unresponsive, resulting in forcing a shutdown by pressing the power button.

    The WD hard drive *really* corrupted a bunch of files and I had to use the sfc/scannow and chkdsk to repair it. You may find the dump file related to that as well.

    I have uninstalled McAfee and Spybot, replacing them with the programs you recommended (running the scans now, nothing's popped up yet). At the moment, I still need to run scannow and chkdsk. I will update this thread with that information, but please let me know if you see anything else in the files that should be addressed. Thank you again!
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 15,026
    Windows 10 Home 64Bit
       #7

    Hi. The new attachments dumps don't seem to load either. Well it's okay, let us know if you're getting more BSODs after making the changes you did on your computer.

    Good luck :)
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 15,026
    Windows 10 Home 64Bit
       #8

    So..anymore BSOD-s? :)
      My Computer


 

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