Getting a BSOD related to ntoskrnl.exe fairly often

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  1. Posts : 23
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
    Thread Starter
       #31

    Alrighty, completely formatted both drives, reinstalled windows from scratch, and we're back with a memory issue, somehow. Could my HDD be causing problems?
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  2. Posts : 2,781
    Windows 10 Pro x64
       #32

    Run the tools that came with your SSD.

    Run MemTest86+, It must be MemTest86+. RAM - Test with Memtest86+
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 23
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
    Thread Starter
       #33

    Ran those, still came back clean. Could it be my video card? Some of the stop errors I'm getting are definitely related to that.
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  4. Posts : 2,781
    Windows 10 Pro x64
       #34
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  5. Posts : 23
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
    Thread Starter
       #35

    Here ya are.
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  6. Posts : 2,781
    Windows 10 Pro x64
       #36

    Hmm, Run Furmark, if the temps goes too high stop the test. Video Card - Stress Test with Furmark
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  7. Posts : 23
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
    Thread Starter
       #37

    Ran it, no stuttering and 83C is the highest it got.
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  8. Posts : 2,781
    Windows 10 Pro x64
       #38

    I'm completely clueless now. I'll send our professional BSOD helper to aid you.
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  9. Arc
    Posts : 35,373
    Microsoft Windows 10 Pro Insider Preview 64-bit
       #39

    I cannot read the crash dumps for some technical reasons. My friend Laith guided me that the faults are IRST related.

    Here, in your case IRST is used as AHCI mode driver. So we can try to remove IRST and apply the system native AHCI driver msahci.sys which never fails. First uninstall it from Control Panel > Programs and Features. Then Uninstall the driver from device manager.

    1. Right click on "my computer" icon and click "manage" on the context menu.
    2. It will open the "computer management" window.
    3. Select "Device Manager" in the left pane, It will list all the existing devices up.
    4. Expand "IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers" by clicking on the triangle in front of it.
    5. Select one Intel device item under it, right click, uninstall.
    6. Continue the process for all Intel items under "IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers"
    7. Now restart the computer. At restart, windows will auto configure the appropriate native system driver.

    See how it goes. Let us know.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 23
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
    Thread Starter
       #40

    Well, something definitely changed. The only device that was there initially was the "Intel device etc.", so I deleted that, restarted a few times (Since it recommended that I did) and now it shows two ATA devices as well as a standard AHCI 1.0 serial ATA controller.
      My Computer


 
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