First off, I'm sorry if this isn't the best place for this thread, but it seemed the most logical place to ask for help since I don't currently have a BSOD log. Here's my situation:
Recently rebuilt my PC, piece by piece over a couple months until I had all new parts. Initially went with an ASRock Z75 Pro3 motherboard, Intel i5-3550, 16GB of Crucual Ballistix Tactical DDR3(2x8GB), and a Seagate Hybrid 2TB+8GB SSHD (plus 4 other standard HDDs). Almost immediately I had crashing issues. Sometimes it would be a BSOD, sometimes just hard freeze that would require holding the power button until kill. When BSOD came up, it almost always showed 0x124 code. At first I thought it was related to OC/voltages, so I set everything to stock, then spent almost two months fiddling with voltages in BIOS. Nothing seemed to have any real effect. I double checked all my drivers/firmware, too. Crashes were randomish - they happened eventually no matter what I was doing, sometimes at the Windows loading screen (before the four dots formed the windows logo, almost always while they were in a line), sometimes 5 hours in, and I can't seem to find any reliable trigger for them except that certain games would cause a crash within 5-15 minutes every time. Prime95, HeavyLoad, etc. do not cause crashes even running for several hours. Removed all peripheral devices and cards, ran video from integrated graphics, no change. Also monitored voltages and temperatures both under load and idle, nothing out of the ordinary. In fact, even when it was OC'd, processor never got above 36C using a Hyper 212 Plus with Arctic Silver 5.
First suspect: Hybrid drive. Lots of reviews said something screwy was going on with the drive, causing blue screens and crashing, so I swapped it with my older Samsung Spinpoint F3, installed a fresh copy of Win7, and had the same thing happen, though I got a few different BSOD codes along with the 0x124. I don't remember what they were, I didn't write them down, but there were maybe 3 different ones I saw, all hardware related. Just to be sure I then swapped to an old WD Caviar with WinXP, same thing. I then booted from a USB drive with Ubuntu Linux, hard freeze after about 20 minutes.
Second Suspect: RAM. Tested each stick 10+ hours with memtest86, then both together. Not a single fault found in over 30 total hours of testing.
Third suspect: Cheap motherboard. Bought a new Asus P8Z77-V, installed, same issues, no changes. I figure the chances of two separate motherboards from different manufacturers and performance tiers having the exact same issue is pretty small.
Fourth suspect: Power supply. Just yesterday replaced old unit with Corsair AX760. Ran great for all of an hour, then same thing.
I'm at the end of my wits and my budget here, and the only two things I haven't replaced or otherwise omitted are the CPU and the RAM. I don't have any other compatible stuff to test with, either. I know the chances of a CPU being a bum are pretty slim, and usually if they are bad, they don't work at all. So the RAM seems a more likely culprit, but I'm confused as to why there were no errors thrown up from memtest86 over 30 hours, when on average I'm crashing every 30-40 minutes. With the holidays coming up, I can afford either a new processor (looking at the i5-3570k) or new ram, and I'd prefer not to have built two whole computers in the past 4 months, even though I'm most of the way there already... Otherwise I'll have to wait until well after the new year. Please help!
Edit: worth mentioning - since I replaced the PS yesterday, I haven't had a bluescreen, only hard freezing. But it's only been a day.
Recently rebuilt my PC, piece by piece over a couple months until I had all new parts. Initially went with an ASRock Z75 Pro3 motherboard, Intel i5-3550, 16GB of Crucual Ballistix Tactical DDR3(2x8GB), and a Seagate Hybrid 2TB+8GB SSHD (plus 4 other standard HDDs). Almost immediately I had crashing issues. Sometimes it would be a BSOD, sometimes just hard freeze that would require holding the power button until kill. When BSOD came up, it almost always showed 0x124 code. At first I thought it was related to OC/voltages, so I set everything to stock, then spent almost two months fiddling with voltages in BIOS. Nothing seemed to have any real effect. I double checked all my drivers/firmware, too. Crashes were randomish - they happened eventually no matter what I was doing, sometimes at the Windows loading screen (before the four dots formed the windows logo, almost always while they were in a line), sometimes 5 hours in, and I can't seem to find any reliable trigger for them except that certain games would cause a crash within 5-15 minutes every time. Prime95, HeavyLoad, etc. do not cause crashes even running for several hours. Removed all peripheral devices and cards, ran video from integrated graphics, no change. Also monitored voltages and temperatures both under load and idle, nothing out of the ordinary. In fact, even when it was OC'd, processor never got above 36C using a Hyper 212 Plus with Arctic Silver 5.
First suspect: Hybrid drive. Lots of reviews said something screwy was going on with the drive, causing blue screens and crashing, so I swapped it with my older Samsung Spinpoint F3, installed a fresh copy of Win7, and had the same thing happen, though I got a few different BSOD codes along with the 0x124. I don't remember what they were, I didn't write them down, but there were maybe 3 different ones I saw, all hardware related. Just to be sure I then swapped to an old WD Caviar with WinXP, same thing. I then booted from a USB drive with Ubuntu Linux, hard freeze after about 20 minutes.
Second Suspect: RAM. Tested each stick 10+ hours with memtest86, then both together. Not a single fault found in over 30 total hours of testing.
Third suspect: Cheap motherboard. Bought a new Asus P8Z77-V, installed, same issues, no changes. I figure the chances of two separate motherboards from different manufacturers and performance tiers having the exact same issue is pretty small.
Fourth suspect: Power supply. Just yesterday replaced old unit with Corsair AX760. Ran great for all of an hour, then same thing.
I'm at the end of my wits and my budget here, and the only two things I haven't replaced or otherwise omitted are the CPU and the RAM. I don't have any other compatible stuff to test with, either. I know the chances of a CPU being a bum are pretty slim, and usually if they are bad, they don't work at all. So the RAM seems a more likely culprit, but I'm confused as to why there were no errors thrown up from memtest86 over 30 hours, when on average I'm crashing every 30-40 minutes. With the holidays coming up, I can afford either a new processor (looking at the i5-3570k) or new ram, and I'd prefer not to have built two whole computers in the past 4 months, even though I'm most of the way there already... Otherwise I'll have to wait until well after the new year. Please help!
Edit: worth mentioning - since I replaced the PS yesterday, I haven't had a bluescreen, only hard freezing. But it's only been a day.
Last edited:
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 Ultimate x64i5-355016GB Crucial Ballistix TacticalMSI GTX460 768MB
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- custom build
- OS
- Windows 7 Ultimate x64
- CPU
- i5-3550
- Motherboard
- Asus P8Z77-V
- Memory
- 16GB Crucial Ballistix Tactical
- Graphics Card(s)
- MSI GTX460 768MB
- Sound Card
- Optical Toslink Out to external DAC
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Viewsonic 23" and Samsung 22"
- Screen Resolution
- 1680x1050
- Hard Drives
- Seagate Hybrid 2TB+8GB SSHD
Samsung Spinpoint F3 1TB
WD Caviar Green 1TB
Seagate Barracuda 750GB
WD Caviar Black 80GB
- PSU
- Corsair AX760
- Case
- Fractal Design Define XL R2
- Cooling
- Cooler Master Hyper 212+
- Other Info
- True Audiophile-Quality Sound System