I have no doubts that Windows 7 is stable on
most systems guys.
So I dug further into my BSOD problem determined to find the cause. This system was compltely stable on my other partition using Vista 64 with no BSOD's ever so this instability with Windows 7 was confusing for me. My system uses some very high end hardware and is also overclocked. It's over 12 hours Prime stable also. You can see in my system specs.
I was getting most of my BSOD's when moving network files around, others were caused from just downloading large files and others were when playing Crysis games. Other times when just watching movies. Even had some random BSOD's just sitting at the desktop. And it also crashed when doing the Windows Experience Index test.
I was stumped on this because I was completely stable on Vista.
The problem seemed to be occuring when ever my Ram or hardrive was stressed. So I took the overclockers approach since my system is overclocked. I upped the MCP,FSB and Ram voltage a bit thinking there is some instability due to low voltage in those areas.
That was 36 hours ago, not one BSOD since,I was easily getting 10 a day before. And I've purposly have been doing things that would normally crash my computer. Watching two HD movies at the same time,moving 20GB files back and forth over the network,downloading large files, over and over again just to see if I can find the weakness.
It would seem that Windows 7 not only moves files faster than Vista but by doing so also puts more stress on the Memory controller and the harddrives. At least this seems to be the case for me. I've also read of problems moving files around with Windows 7 so maybe that is part of the problem.
In any event it appears that I may have fixed this problem, I will know for sure in a few days. I will play Crysis today and see how it does. But moving files,watching movies even two at once and downloading are stable for me once again.
