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#1
Your Windows installation is counterfeit. You have a Lenovo PID on an ASRock retail motherboard.
Counterfeit installations such as yours can contain heavily modified code that can cause the installation to behave it unexpected ways. Analysing BSODs and determining their causes on these sorts of installations is completely unreliable, and for this reason most analysts won't attempt it.Code:Host Name: ANDY-PC OS Name: Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate OS Version: 6.1.7600 N/A Build 7600 OS Manufacturer: Microsoft Corporation OS Configuration: Standalone Workstation OS Build Type: Multiprocessor Free Registered Owner: Andy Registered Organization: Product ID: 00426-OEM-8992662-00497 Original Install Date: 8/16/2014, 9:28:02 PM System Boot Time: 10/15/2014, 7:27:36 PM System Manufacturer: To Be Filled By O.E.M. System Model: To Be Filled By O.E.M. System Type: x64-based PC Processor(s): 1 Processor(s) Installed. [01]: AMD64 Family 18 Model 1 Stepping 0
My recommendation is to install a genuine copy of Windows 7. This will minimise the problems you are experiencing and make subsequent diagnosis of BSODs far more reliable. Once you are running a genuine Windows 7 installation and are still experiencing BSODs, upload your new logs we will be happy to help you solve them.