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The utility won't work for me, even though I've selected the 64-bit version it says that it is the wrong version.
The utility won't work for me, even though I've selected the 64-bit version it says that it is the wrong version.
Download the latest bios and put it on the USB stick and use the Asus EZ flash 2 utility under BIOS > Tools
Attachment 278842
Ok so I did that, and I now have a new version of BIOS. However I'm still getting bsods. This is starting to become really frustrating! I've got no idea whatsoever of what is causing it. For all I know, it might as well be a hardware as a software problem. I'm attaching the sf including the dumps of my bsods for yesterday and today. Hopefully there's something there that You can see. Thanks
1. Whats the PSU Wattage ??
2. Post the latest HWmonitor snapshot.
3. Uninstall the installed MSE and reinstall by downloading the latest one from Microsoft MSE website. the MPfilter.sys was cause of one of the BSOD and also the installation looks corrupted.
4. Please run Autoruns and then click on File> Save.. Save the file in .arn format and upload here. Will have a look
Wasn't sure of what number You wanted from my PSU, so attached a picture of the sticker on my PSU with all the information.
HWmonitor is attached.
MSE is uninstalled and then re installed from a new download.
Autorun .arn is attached in a zip.
Is it possible that my PSU is the evil behind all this. Can the PSU cause all these bsod's?
Are there any tests to run to see if it is the PSU, or do I simply have to put another one in and see if it still bsod?
There are few tests that don't require some very expensive equipment. You can get a multimeter and use it and get pretty accurate results. Could you go into BIOS and tell me the reading on the +12V, +5V and the +3.3V? That is just to give an indication. The problem is those will be the values at idle. What they are under stress is where it matters most. Another issue is your PSU has 4 +12V rails and it matters how those rails are divided up.
Ok, but there aren't any software to test the PSU with, only hardware?
12V = 12.030V
5V = 4.956V
3.3V = 3.372V