Intermittent BSODs over the past few months

Danj

New member
Local time
3:05 AM
Messages
1
Location
Cambridge, UK
Ever since I built this PC I've had BSODs every so often. I've not been able to trace them to any particular source, but lately they seem to be getting a lot more frequent and I am getting fed up, so I figured I would try asking here.

I've used the SF Diagnostic Tool to gather the requested information and attach it to this thread.

The most recent one seems to suggest a problem with the CPU. It's been suggested to me that my CPU might need a microcode update - I installed SiSoft Sandra Lite which is able to check the CPU microcode level and indeed it does suggest it isn't on the latest version, but as far as I can tell there is no procedure for manually updating microcode, you just have to wait and hope it comes down through Windows Update or something.

Can anyone help?
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 x64i7-47702 x Corsair 8GB DDR3-1600 XMS3 CL11ASUS nVidia Geforce TITAN 6GB
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
custom
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 x64
CPU
i7-4770
Motherboard
ASUS Z87I-PRO
Memory
2 x Corsair 8GB DDR3-1600 XMS3 CL11
Graphics Card(s)
ASUS nVidia Geforce TITAN 6GB
Hard Drives
Intel 520 Series 240GB SSD
Seagate 4TB HDD
Antivirus
Avast! free
Browser
Google Chrome
Welcome to SF Dan :).

The dump files are not showing a definitive cause but most of them are 0x1A, so the best course
of action in these type of situations is detailed in the quote below.

Your crash dumps are not showing any finite probable cause.

Test your RAM modules for possible errors.
How to Test and Diagnose RAM Issues with Memtest86+
Run memtest for at least 8 passes, preferably overnight.

First run it with all the existing/installed RAM modules. If it comes with no error, all is good.

But if it starts showing errors, Stop testing. Errors/red lines means one or more RAM is faulty. But the fault may occur due to a faulty DIMM slot, too, which is a motherboard component. Using memtest86+, you can discriminate between a faulty RAM and a faulty motherboard.

How? Say you have two RAM sticks and two DIMM slots. You obtained errors at the test with all RAM sticks installed. Now, remove all the sticks but one. Test it in all the available slots, one by one. Continue the same procedure for all the available sticks.
How to make the inference that is it a RAM issue or it is a motherboard issue? Suppose you have got the result like that:
test|Slot1|Slot2
RAM1| Error | Error
RAM2|Good|Good
It is a RAM, a bad RAM.

But if you have got a result like that:
test|Slot1|Slot2
RAM1| Error |Good
RAM2| Error |Good
It is a motherboard issue. The particular slot is bad.

If memtest comes free from errors, enable Driver Verifier to monitor the drivers.
Driver Verifier - Enable and Disable
Run Driver Verifier for 24 hours or the occurrence of the next crash, whichever is earlier.

   Information
Why Driver Verifier:
It puts a stress on the drivers, ans so it makes the unstable drivers crash. Hopefully the driver that crashes is recorded in the memory dump.

How Can we know that DV is enabled:
It will make the system bit of slow, laggy.

   Warning
Before enabling DV, make it sure that you have earlier System restore points made in your computer. You can check it easily by using CCleaner looking at Tools > System Restore.

If there is no points, make a System Restore Point manually before enabling DV.

   Tip


Let us know the results, with the subsequent crash dumps, if any.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 10Intel Core i5 3570K16GB 1600Mhz G.SkillGigabyte GTX 970 G1-Gaming
Computer type
PC/Desktop
OS
Windows 10
CPU
Intel Core i5 3570K
Motherboard
Asus P8Z77V-PRO
Memory
16GB 1600Mhz G.Skill
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GTX 970 G1-Gaming
PSU
Seasonic 1000W Platinum
Case
Fractal Design Define R4
Cooling
Noctua NH-D14
Back
Top