Checked all of the previous suggestions but the issue is getting worse. Machine continues to go reboot when I start it. Also the start button turns yellow at times and beeps. Had a couple of BSODs earlier in the day. Managed to boot it up but the boot up was really slow taking 5 times longer than usual to resolve graphics on desktop. During one of the reboots I did an F12 hard drive -DST Short test and came up with evidence of FAIL Error code 2000-0146. I am very perplexed about what is going on as the failures are not consistent. As mentioned I am getting everything from BSOD's to recurring spontaneous reboots. I have also noticed the cooling fan seems to be working much harder than normal and also have noticed that upon shutting down the fan will speed up suddenly before it shuts off. I really need some help with this
This right there is already raises a red flag about the storage health, I would backup the data
to an external storage as fast as possible!
Is the system still within the warranty period?
As for the bugchecks, one of them is a
0x116 (TDR) which is basically the GPU could not be controlled anymore, it froze for a certain amount of time and the system noticed it is, tried to recover it but failed to do so.
But I'm more interested in the second which
0x124 with a first parameter of
4, hardware fault on the
PCI-Express bus.
The hardware level errors are more of an issue and taking into account what you're describing it seems
that the
main issue is the GPU.
Test for thermals and stability;
- Download Speccy and post a Screenshot of the summary window, one at idle and another while putting load on the PC using Prime95 for the CPU side and Furmark for the GPU.
Please fill out this form and post back the result:
Good practice, open up the case and re-seat all types of connection.
- SATA Cables (HDD/SSD/ODD).
- SATA-Power.
- Motherboard 24-pin.
- Motherboard 4/8-pin (CPU).
- Re-seat the RAM.
- Re-seat the GPU.
Make sure that every slot / cable head is free of dust or other obstruction.
Make sure that every connection is seating properly and firmly in-place.
Warning
The Following Method Should NOT Be Performed On An SSD!
Testing the HDD:
- Perform a Disk Check | Disk Check
- Then Post the results following | THIS METHOD
- Download SeaTools for DOS if you don't want to use a CD to test the HDD you can use YUMI – Multiboot USB Creator to create a bootable USB (instructions are found at the bottom of both pages).
- If SeaTools for Windows is unable to recognize your HDD visit HDDdiag and follow the instructions.
If SeaTools For DOS does not recognize the drive;
Boot into the BIOS using the
*Fx key.
Look for an entry called
SATA Mode (or something similar), it should be set to
IDE / AHCI.
It's probably set to
AHCI which is why SeaTools doesn't recognize them in the DOS environment.
Set it to
IDE then save and exit usually by pressing the
F10 key.
Now boot into SeaTools and it should detect the drives.
Start the
Long Test and let it run.
Upon completion don't try to boot into Windows as it will only result in a BSOD, go back into the BIOS
and change the SATA setting back to what it was in the first place.
Post back with the results

.