gdrv.sys bsod win 7 home premium

oldbaldguy

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I have been having problems with bsod's on my machine. Reading through these and other forums, I found mention of the file "gdrv.sys" ... which my dumps have listed as THE culprit.

The discussions have shown this file is part of a power management thingy from Gigabyte. I found it on my box and uninstalled it.

More than one thread suggested renaming or removing the file. So here comes the problem ... IT KEEPS COMING BACK! I renamed it and it was back after reboot. I deleted it and it was back after reboot.

How can I get rid of it so it stays gone?

My system
New PC built for video editing

Case ANTEC NINE HUNDRED ULTIMATE GAMER'S CASE
CPU Intel® Core™ 2 Quad Processor Q8400
CPU cooler Thermaltake V1 Universal Cpu Cooler
Memory 4GB DDR2 PC8500 TWINX MEMORY Corsair
MOBO Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3P Motherboard
Power supply Corsair CMPSU-750TX 750W High Performance and Energy Efficient Power Supply
Purchase parts August 6, 2009
Video card Visiontek ATI All in Wonder HD Deluxe PCI-Express Video Card / TV Tuner
Windows 7 Windows 7 Ultimate plus Windows 7 Home Premium (dual boot)
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

windows 7 home premiumIntel® Core™ 2 Quad Processor Q84004GB DDR2 PC8500 TWINX MEMORY CorsairVisiontek ATI All in Wonder HD Deluxe PCI-Exp...
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
home built
OS
windows 7 home premium
CPU
Intel® Core™ 2 Quad Processor Q8400
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3P Motherboard
Memory
4GB DDR2 PC8500 TWINX MEMORY Corsair
Graphics Card(s)
Visiontek ATI All in Wonder HD Deluxe PCI-Express Video Card
Sound Card
on MOBO
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster 206bw
Hard Drives
200 gig seagate and 500 gig seagate internal drives, 750 gig western digital external
PSU
Corsair CMPSU-750TX 750W High Performance and Energy Efficie
Case
ANTEC NINE HUNDRED ULTIMATE GAMER'S CASE
Cooling
Thermaltake V1 Universal Cpu Cooler
I have been having problems with bsod's on my machine. Reading through these and other forums, I found mention of the file "gdrv.sys" ... which my dumps have listed as THE culprit.

The discussions have shown this file is part of a power management thingy from Gigabyte. I found it on my box and uninstalled it.

More than one thread suggested renaming or removing the file. So here comes the problem ... IT KEEPS COMING BACK! I renamed it and it was back after reboot. I deleted it and it was back after reboot.

How can I get rid of it so it stays gone?

My system
New PC built for video editing

Case ANTEC NINE HUNDRED ULTIMATE GAMER'S CASE
CPU Intel® Core™ 2 Quad Processor Q8400
CPU cooler Thermaltake V1 Universal Cpu Cooler
Memory 4GB DDR2 PC8500 TWINX MEMORY Corsair
MOBO Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3P Motherboard
Power supply Corsair CMPSU-750TX 750W High Performance and Energy Efficient Power Supply
Purchase parts August 6, 2009
Video card Visiontek ATI All in Wonder HD Deluxe PCI-Express Video Card / TV Tuner
Windows 7 Windows 7 Ultimate plus Windows 7 Home Premium (dual boot)

If it keeps getting re-installed I suspect you need it. Are you still having BSOD's? Any chance you could upload one to us so we can examine it?

Ken
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Win 8 Release candidate 8400[email protected]4 gigsNvidia 9600M
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP Pavillion dv-7 1005 Tx
OS
Win 8 Release candidate 8400
CPU
[email protected]
Memory
4 gigs
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia 9600M
Sound Card
HD built-in
Monitor(s) Displays
17" Wxga
Screen Resolution
1440x900
Cooling
none
Internet Speed
45Mb down 5Mb up
You sure you removed it?

Use revouninstaller and remove throughly any giga-byte software on your rig.

Edit.

Also, please disable any energy saving features in your BIOS.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 8.1 PRO3rd Generation Intel Core i7‐3612QM CPU @ 2.1...8GB DDR3NVIDIA GeForce GT 525M (128 bit), 1GB Grpahics
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL VOSTRO 3650
OS
Windows 8.1 PRO
CPU
3rd Generation Intel Core i7‐3612QM CPU @ 2.10GHZ
Memory
8GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce GT 525M (128 bit), 1GB Grpahics
Screen Resolution
1920X1080
Hard Drives
750GB 5400RPM
gdrv.sys Error along with about 15 other messages

I had the exact same issue with my brand new computer that I built. It was my first build the the computer ran very well for a week or so. Then I started getting the BSOD. I have the Gigabyte GA-P45-UD3P mother board and I installed 4 - 2gb memory sticks in the provided 4 slots. The memory was some of Crucial's very best so it was not generic memory.

After 3 reinstalls of windows, running memtest86+, buying a new HD, etc the BSOD got worse and worse so I could do NOTHING on the $1600 machine I built. Finally I threw up my hands and took it into a local computer repair shop.

They ran every test they could and found that everything was working beautifully no issues. However when the went to install Windows 7 -- surprise surprise BSOD. They had my machine for 5 days and finally they figured out that.....

The stupid Gigabyte Motherboard can't run the 4 sticks of RAM (apparently if I had purchased the EXACT memory they recommend - still can't find that info - and had the voltages set to the precise number, then it could run the four stick of ram). So after almost 30 days of screwing around I now have my VERY FAST albeit with only 4gb of RAM computer back and it is running beautifully.

If you have 4 sticks of ram take out one of the colored pairs (they should be every other one - if you take out the Zero slot ram it won't boot - you know you guessed wrong then)

I found it outrageous that I spent $300+ dollars on a motherboard that can't work with 4 sticks of very good ram. Shame on Gigabyte for this.

Hope this helps.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 64 bit
OS
Windows 7 64 bit
I had the exact same issue with my brand new computer that I built. It was my first build the the computer ran very well for a week or so. Then I started getting the BSOD. I have the Gigabyte GA-P45-UD3P mother board and I installed 4 - 2gb memory sticks in the provided 4 slots. The memory was some of Crucial's very best so it was not generic memory.

After 3 reinstalls of windows, running memtest86+, buying a new HD, etc the BSOD got worse and worse so I could do NOTHING on the $1600 machine I built. Finally I threw up my hands and took it into a local computer repair shop.

They ran every test they could and found that everything was working beautifully no issues. However when the went to install Windows 7 -- surprise surprise BSOD. They had my machine for 5 days and finally they figured out that.....

The stupid Gigabyte Motherboard can't run the 4 sticks of RAM (apparently if I had purchased the EXACT memory they recommend - still can't find that info - and had the voltages set to the precise number, then it could run the four stick of ram). So after almost 30 days of screwing around I now have my VERY FAST albeit with only 4gb of RAM computer back and it is running beautifully.

If you have 4 sticks of ram take out one of the colored pairs (they should be every other one - if you take out the Zero slot ram it won't boot - you know you guessed wrong then)

I found it outrageous that I spent $300+ dollars on a motherboard that can't work with 4 sticks of very good ram. Shame on Gigabyte for this.

Hope this helps.

Frustrating situation I am sure.

Just a FYI but that thread is from back in March, and I hope they have solved it by now.

If you have a new problem, you should probably start a new thread



Ken
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Win 8 Release candidate 8400[email protected]4 gigsNvidia 9600M
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP Pavillion dv-7 1005 Tx
OS
Win 8 Release candidate 8400
CPU
[email protected]
Memory
4 gigs
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia 9600M
Sound Card
HD built-in
Monitor(s) Displays
17" Wxga
Screen Resolution
1440x900
Cooling
none
Internet Speed
45Mb down 5Mb up
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