Constant BSOD on new custom build - Various Minidump Errors 0x0000003b

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  1. Posts : 32
    Windows 7 Professional 64 Bit SP1
    Thread Starter
       #41

    Hey YoYo,

    Sorry for the hiatus. Some things came up this past week that kept me from doing much troubleshooting. I should have some time to dive back in at the end of the week. I greatly appreciate all your help so far. Thanks to you I have renewed hope that this issue can be resolved. I will post a status update soon.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 3,056
    Windows 10
       #42

    It's ok take your time :) .
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 32
    Windows 7 Professional 64 Bit SP1
    Thread Starter
       #43

    Hey YoYo,

    So a few major things have changed since my last post. I have completely switched over to an MSI Z87-GD65 gaming mb. The good news is that since the mb switch I have not had anymore BSOD but the bad news is I'm running into another issue. My display driver keeps crashing over and over again.

    The first few times it crashes it will usually recover and I will see a notification icon that says the following:

    "Display driver stopped responding and has now recovered. Display driver Nvidia Windows kernel mode driver version 320.49"

    I can tell it's about to crash because it usually starts lagging a few seconds before the crash. The worst part is that sometimes it does not recover and the system completely locks up. I can still see everything on screen but the mouse and keyboard are unresponsive. When that happens I have to power down the machine by holding the power button.

    What do you think Yoyo? Is this a better position to be in than BSOD or worse?





      My Computer


  4. Posts : 3,056
    Windows 10
       #44

    Thanks for the update :) .
    A few question please.

    Leo340 said:
    Hey YoYo,

    So a few major things have changed since my last post. I have completely switched over to an MSI Z87-GD65 gaming mb.
    Did you reinstall windows when you swapped the motherboard?

    Leo340 said:
    The good news is that since the mb switch I have not had anymore BSOD but the bad news is I'm running into another issue. My display driver keeps crashing over and over again.

    The first few times it crashes it will usually recover and I will see a notification icon that says the following:

    "Display driver stopped responding and has now recovered. Display driver Nvidia Windows kernel mode driver version 320.49"

    I can tell it's about to crash because it usually starts lagging a few seconds before the crash. The worst part is that sometimes it does not recover and the system completely locks up. I can still see everything on screen but the mouse and keyboard are unresponsive. When that happens I have to power down the machine by holding the power button.

    What do you think Yoyo? Is this a better position to be in than BSOD or worse?
    What you're experiencing is called a TDR (Timeout Detection & Recovery).
    TVeblen said:
    "Display driver xxxxx stopped responding and was recovered"

    Timeout Detection & Recovery (TDR) = "Display Driver Stopped Responding and was Recovered" is a useful feature that started in Vista and is also in W7 that allows the OS to try and recover from a video timeout so that the system does not crash to a bluescreen. Symptoms included a screen flash with the TDR message appearing one or more times or the screen blinking out to black. If the system cannot recover it will crash (Stop Error 116 typical). The issue is that the video card is not responding as expected.
    • More details HERE, please read.

    Since we ran GPU in a different slot on the original motherboard, did you have any issues
    while the GPU was used in that way?



    We can't test the RAM just yet due to incompatibility with the new chipset we need to take the
    trail and error approach if you may.
    Take out one of the RAM modules and try to reproduce the error the same way you experienced
    it up until now. Do the same to all of the RAM modules until the error is predictable
    with one or more specific RAM modules.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 32
    Windows 7 Professional 64 Bit SP1
    Thread Starter
       #45

    Yes. When I swapped motherboards I did a fresh install of the os.

    After moving the GPU to slot 2 slot on the original Gigabyte motherboard I did not have the same issue.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 3,056
    Windows 10
       #46

    Leo340 said:
    Yes. When I swapped motherboards I did a fresh install of the os.

    After moving the GPU to slot 2 slot on the original Gigabyte motherboard I did not have the same issue.

    Thanks :) .

    Roll back the driver the same we did before mentioned in details in post #4.
    If that doesn't solve it, start taking all but one of the RAM modules out and systematically
    putting them back in one by one until you can isolate the module that causes the problems.

    YoYo155 said:
    We can't test the RAM just yet due to incompatibility with the new chipset we need to take the
    trail and error approach if you may.
    Take out one of the RAM modules and try to reproduce the error the same way you experienced
    it up until now. Do the same to all of the RAM modules until the error is predictable
    with one or more specific RAM modules.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 32
    Windows 7 Professional 64 Bit SP1
    Thread Starter
       #47

    Hey Yoyo,

    I tried rolling back the driver before posting. I had the most up-to-date version at first but now I'm using the version from July. I used the method you outlined in post #4 to wipe the old files before I installed July version, but I'm still having problems.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 3,056
    Windows 10
       #48

    Leo340 said:
    Hey Yoyo,

    I tried rolling back the driver before posting. I had the most up-to-date version at first but now I'm using the version from July. I used the method you outlined in post #4 to wipe the old files before I installed July version, but I'm still having problems.
    Try ruling out possible bad RAM like mentioned above.
    It's important to remember the TDR are very tricky to diagnose due to the fact that they can
    originate from several issues, which are detailed in the post linked in post #44 it is important you read it.
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 32
    Windows 7 Professional 64 Bit SP1
    Thread Starter
       #49

    Will do. Once I'm done I will post back
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 32
    Windows 7 Professional 64 Bit SP1
    Thread Starter
       #50

    Hey Yoyo,

    I decided to take a little metal health break from troubleshooting. I've been struggling with this issue for a couple months now. Anyways I'm back in the swing of things and I'll let you know what I come up with.

    I took all my RAM sticks out except one and I'm waiting to see what it does. I guess I'll use it a couple days before I move to the next stick in the bunch provided it doesn't crash sooner than that. I'll keep you posted!
      My Computer


 
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