Cold Boot BSODS ??


  1. Posts : 6
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #1

    Cold Boot BSODS ??


    Hello all,

    I recently built an HTPC for my brother. Almost immediately after getting it up and running, we started getting BSODs. The crazy thing is that it always happens from a cold boot, and will happen over and over again. But once the machine has been running for 5 to 10 minutes or so, the boot will go through, and the machine works fine after that.

    (I should say that my brother also reports BSODs while he's watching movies sometimes or doing various other tasks, but I haven't seen them and he removed the logs with CCleaner so I can't check)

    So far I re-formatted and removed the RAID setup, switched hard drives from the Gigabyte SATA2 Controller to the Intel P55 controller, Switched RAM positions, ran Memtest and checkdisk several times over..... I'm just about out of ideas.

    Below are the systems specs, and attached is a zip of the minidump contents, the memory dump file (nevermind, too big), the checkdisk output, and a subfolder with files created after getting crashes using Verifier.
    I should note that the crashes while using Verifier were not BSODS, and probably unrelated to the problem at hand, but since I can't figure it out I don't want to leave anything out.

    Thanks in advance for your help!

    MoBo: GIGABYTE GA-P55M-UD2 P55

    CPU: CPU INTEL|CORE I5 750 2.66G

    RAM: MEM 2Gx2|GSKILL F3-12800CL9D-4GBRL

    Video: VGA SAPPHIRE|100283VXL HD5770 1G

    HDs: 2T|WD WD20EADS & 2T|ST SATA2 ST32000542AS

    PSU: RAIDMAX|RX-600AF 600W


    If I left out any other useful information, please let me know and I will update the thread with it. Thanks again!
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 28,845
    Win 8 Release candidate 8400
       #2

    ATeX said:
    Hello all,

    I recently built an HTPC for my brother. Almost immediately after getting it up and running, we started getting BSODs. The crazy thing is that it always happens from a cold boot, and will happen over and over again. But once the machine has been running for 5 to 10 minutes or so, the boot will go through, and the machine works fine after that.

    (I should say that my brother also reports BSODs while he's watching movies sometimes or doing various other tasks, but I haven't seen them and he removed the logs with CCleaner so I can't check)

    So far I re-formatted and removed the RAID setup, switched hard drives from the Gigabyte SATA2 Controller to the Intel P55 controller, Switched RAM positions, ran Memtest and checkdisk several times over..... I'm just about out of ideas.

    Below are the systems specs, and attached is a zip of the minidump contents, the memory dump file (nevermind, too big), the checkdisk output, and a subfolder with files created after getting crashes using Verifier.
    I should note that the crashes while using Verifier were not BSODS, and probably unrelated to the problem at hand, but since I can't figure it out I don't want to leave anything out.

    Thanks in advance for your help!

    MoBo: GIGABYTE GA-P55M-UD2 P55

    CPU: CPU INTEL|CORE I5 750 2.66G

    RAM: MEM 2Gx2|GSKILL F3-12800CL9D-4GBRL

    Video: VGA SAPPHIRE|100283VXL HD5770 1G

    HDs: 2T|WD WD20EADS & 2T|ST SATA2 ST32000542AS

    PSU: RAIDMAX|RX-600AF 600W


    If I left out any other useful information, please let me know and I will update the thread with it. Thanks again!
    Hate to say it but the DMP's are still pointing to memory. How long did you run memtest? did you test the mobo slots one by one?



    Code:
    Built by: 7600.16539.amd64fre.win7_gdr.100226-1909
    Debug session time: Sat May 29 09:31:22.564 2010 (GMT-4)
    System Uptime: 0 days 9:22:23.000
    BugCheck A, {fffff6800000b900, 0, 0, fffff80002a8d1e2}
    Probably caused by : memory_corruption ( nt!MiAgeWorkingSet+1c2 )
    BUGCHECK_STR:  0xA
    PROCESS_NAME:  SearchFilterHo
    ииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииииии
    Built by: 7600.16539.amd64fre.win7_gdr.100226-1909
    Debug session time: Sat May 29 00:07:49.408 2010 (GMT-4)
    System Uptime: 0 days 0:00:29.454
    BugCheck 19, {3, fffff8a0011e1320, fffff8a0011e1320, fffffaa0011e1320}
    Probably caused by : Pool_Corruption ( nt!ExFreePool+75b )
    BUGCHECK_STR:  0x19_3
    PROCESS_NAME:  svchost.exe
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 6
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Yesterday after posting I started up the newest version on memtest. 25 passes later and there are still no errors. This is with both sticks in dual-channel mode.

    Is it better to test the sticks one by one? If so should I test them both in the same slot or in the slot they are usually in?
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 6
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #4

    update: I believe I found the problem. After moving both hard drives off of the Gigabyte SataII controller chip and on to the P55 controller, BSODS seem to have stopped. I am assuming that controller is bad, but not worth replacing the whole Mobo, since there are 8 other ports on the Intel chip.

    Thank you for helping me look in to this.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 28,845
    Win 8 Release candidate 8400
       #5

    ATeX said:
    update: I believe I found the problem. After moving both hard drives off of the Gigabyte SataII controller chip and on to the P55 controller, BSODS seem to have stopped. I am assuming that controller is bad, but not worth replacing the whole Mobo, since there are 8 other ports on the Intel chip.

    Thank you for helping me look in to this.

    Glad you have figured it out. The one thing I forgot to ask was about the controller

    Ken
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 6
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #6

    Ever been wrong? Happened to me.


    So it wasn't the controller after all. The next day we got another BSOD. What followed was several days of making a minor config change, rebooting directly in to memtest, and then waiting at least an hour for everything to completely cool before repeating.

    Ultimately we did discover that it was one of the memory sticks. Luckily the company offers a lifetime guarantee on their RAM. This was just such a huge P.I.T.A.

    Has anyone else encountered this kind of problem, where hardware behaved faulty until it warmed up, then ran fine? HD's don't count, cause of moving parts and whatnot.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 2
    Win 7 Pro x64
       #7

    ATeX said:
    Has anyone else encountered this kind of problem, where hardware behaved faulty until it warmed up, then ran fine? HD's don't count, cause of moving parts and whatnot.
    YEP!!! ME

    I sometimes get the BSOD for a fraction of a second and/or Disk Boot Failure. The machine simply and randomly shuts-down (2 mins - 2 hours). I have a little different config: IDE Channel 0 SSD (OS/Apps) and IDE Channel 2+3 RAID 1 (Data); the Builder "skipped" Chanel 1 for some unknown reason. I did not build this system. I seems that the Builder used Gigabyte to configure the RAID, but Intel is controlling the RAID (I'm using the latest x64 version).

    I planned on running Memtest and see what happens. If I cannot figure this out I am going to RMA.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 6
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #8

    If your machine runs up to two hours then it isn't really the same kind of problem. Your system is already warmed up. But either way, memtest is a good idea.
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 61
    Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit Retail
       #9

    ATeX said:
    Has anyone else encountered this kind of problem, where hardware behaved faulty until it warmed up, then ran fine? HD's don't count, cause of moving parts and whatnot.
    Count me in, right in the middle of it. Or actually, my 2nd kit of OCZ memory had this warm up problem. Now on my third. it also seems to behave a bit different between coldboots and warm memtests (in the middle of RMA again, not sure what the problem is. 3 broken kits?!)
    I remember running memtest for 16 hours without any errors reported, 16 passes. No errors. Though I would still receive ram related BSOD's and the next morning upon coldboot: errors.

    Stuff like this is a P.I.T.A. indeed. Hope you figured this one out for good!
      My Computer


 

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