Display Driver NVIDIA Windows Kernel Mode Driver, 388.13...

bobxxx

New member
I've been having some weird issues where my screen randomly turns black for a quick second and I get the message saying:

"Display Driver NVIDIA Windows Kernel Mode Driver, 388.13 stopped responding and has successfully recovered."

Definitely something wrong with the driver so was wondering if someone can help thanks.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
The easiest thing to try is a Windows update. Although I would not normally recommend finding a video driver via Windows Update, in your case there is a problem with the driver, so it's worth a try.

Go to Windows Update and check for updates. Look in the optional updates to see if there is a video driver listed. If so, install only that one driver. In other words, go to the important updates and uncheck all of them.

There's no harm in installing the important updates, except that it will take a lot of time to do so.

If that didn't fix the video problem, then go to the NVidia website and download and install a driver that is either older or newer than 388.13.

If that didn't fix it, then start picking older and older video drivers from the NVidia website, to see if one of them will work.

Worst case scenario, install the Vista driver or the Windows 8 driver.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell
OS
Linux Mint 18.2 xfce 64-bit (VMWare host) / Windows 8.1 Pro 32-bit (VMWare guest)
CPU
Haswell
Memory
4 GB
Monitor(s) Displays
Acer 23"
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
Two hard drives, 1TB each: One for Linux, one for my data.
Keyboard
IBM Model M
Antivirus
Sophos (Linux), Trend Micro (Windows)
Browser
Firefox, Opera
Other Info
I use Samba to share my data drive with the other computers at my house and with my guest session in VMWare Workstation Player.
Old post, but FWIW, memory problems could cause the symptoms experienced.
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo W510
OS
Windows 7 Professional x64
CPU
Intel core i7 Q 720 1.6GHz
Motherboard
2518AHU
Memory
2x4GB + 1x2GB 10 GB total
Graphics Card(s)
nvidia Quatro FX 880M
Hard Drives
Hitachi HTS723232A7A364 SCSI Disk
Antivirus
Malewarebytes, MS Security Essentials
Browser
IE, Modzilla
Go to Windows Update and check for updates. Look in the optional updates to see if there is a video driver listed. If so, install only that one driver. In other words, go to the important updates and uncheck all of them.

If that didn't fix the video problem, then go to the NVidia website and download and install a driver that is either older or newer than 388.13.

If that didn't fix it, then start picking older and older video drivers from the NVidia website, to see if one of them will work.

Now I'm working my way through this kind of troubleshooting. I had a heck of a time finding an nvidia driver package that would install in my system.

Now all looks well in device manager, but the system is not detecting the extra monitor. The nvidia control panel says it's crashed, but I guess that doesn't necessarily assure me that it's a software issue instead of a hardware issue.
 

My Computers

System One System Two

  • Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
    Dell Opti 7050
    OS
    10 trying for 7x64
    CPU
    i7 6th gen
    Memory
    32G
    Hard Drives
    1T SSD; 2T HDD
  • Computer type
    PC/Desktop
Back
Top