HikariChino, I believe I asked you this before, but I don't recall what your answer was. Are you certain your Intel SSD has the latest Firmware. Do you have the Intel SSD Toolbox installed? If you do, please check it and make sure your SSD is operating properly. I don't know how your computer is set up and what you have on the Seagate internal 2 TB drive. What I would like to do is disconnect your external hard drive and disconnect your Internal Hard drive leaving only your SSD installed. If you have user files or programs on the internal Seagate, Windows is going to throw up a lot of errors, but it will work.
I am sure you are asking yourself what I'm doing. So, let me explain. This is your last dump file
Code:
[COLOR=red]NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM (24)[/COLOR]
If you see NtfsExceptionFilter on the stack then the 2nd and 3rd
parameters are the exception record and context record. Do a .cxr
on the 3rd parameter and then kb to obtain a more informative stack
trace.
The part notated in Red is the only thing important to you. What it means is there is something wrong with your file system. Since you ran Seatools on the other drives I 'assume' (you know what that means) that it is the file system on your SSD.
I looked farther into the dump and almost everything I saw, and it was a lot, was NTFS File System errors and Intel Rapid Storage Technology errors. That is why I am asking you to look at the Intel Toolbox and run any test they have on it to see if it is functioning properly and that you have the latest Firmware. I would like you to check out the SSD first before we go any farther. Firmware updates can solve problems like this. So, if there is a newer firmware, please install it. It will tell you the procedure and whether it is destructive. Which means you will lose files. That is not usually the case with most Firmware updates, but they will tell you and I encourage you to back up all personal files first, just as a precaution.
I would also like you to go into BIOS and set optimized defaults, which is usually F5 on most Asus boards. You will get a confirmation, answer yes and it will be done. Then go and make certain your SATA Controller is set to what it is set to right now, otherwise you may not be able to boot into Windows. I believe you said it was set to AHCI, and Asus usually sets it to AHCI by default, but check anyway. Make sure your Ram timings, Frequency and Dram Voltage is set to Manufacturer's specs, set your boot order , save and exit. This just ensures that if something got changed by accident or by a BSOD or some other means, it should be set right and there should be no BIOS problems. If you would like to wait for your Boyfriend to have time to do these things, that is no problem and no hurry. If you or him have any problems or questions, please feel free to ask. Neither I or Boozad mind at all explaining anything we ask you to do or answering any other questions you may have.