please come and try to help me! my post is entitled 'please help me' the matter is urgent!
My Computer
At a glance
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Zoostorm
- OS
- Windows 7 Home Premium 32bit
- Memory
- 1GB RAM
That is a normal screen when you startup after a BSOD. You may want to start with this tutorial memtest86 test memory. It is a tedious process tracking down what the problems are. I am sure you have been to Asus website and updated all drivers and gone to AMD and update the drivers for the GPU card. Start with the memory, then test the hard drives with the diagnostic tool from the manufacturers website.
Well, I actually, honestly believe my system, before the motherboard shorted out, had problems for different reasons. Some of my drivers were outdated at the time, including my RAID, chipset, and graphics. However, the fact that my own RAM doesn't work in his machine is unsettling and disturbing. If I have to RMA two sets of RAM, I'm probably going to rage out. I've already been waiting over a month for my new motherboard.I do find it strange that you built 2 identical machines and they are both unstable. You do get bad parts occasionally but 2 at the same time is strange. At this point the machine is not stable enough to run prime95 (CPU test). The only thing I can suggest is to start checking components 1 at a time, and also go back through the machine and make sure all wiring is securely connected, there are no frayed wires, and all connections are properly connected. There does seem to be something about the CD/DVD player. Correct me if I am wrong, but you have at least booted with it disconnected. If that continues I would suggest another Cd/DVD player. It is the cheapest component in the machine. It at least makes me think it is a contributer to the problem. Keep us advised of your progress.
In RAID mode the data is spread over both drives that is why it shows up as a single drive. If your PSU was bad it would be more likely to crash with just one power lead to both drives. with separate cables you are using two power rails which should be easier on the PSU.
I think it may be possible that the RAM is underpowered I need to chase this up and I will get back to you.
In RAID mode the data is spread over both drives that is why it shows up as a single drive. If your PSU was bad it would be more likely to crash with just one power lead to both drives. with separate cables you are using two power rails which should be easier on the PSU.
I think it may be possible that the RAM is underpowered I need to chase this up and I will get back to you.
Let me know if you need pictures of my BIOS. I'm still new to voltage settings and power settings in BIOS, and I never tweaked it due to my ignorance of it.
Also, in bios tell me what the setting for CPU NB is.
Set the dram voltage to 1.5
They should be set to RAIDCPU/NB offset voltage: 1.100
NB voltage: 1.093
DRAM voltage was up to 1.643, and the sticks say 1.5v.
SATA ports with RAID HDDs are set to RAID and not AHCI. Should they be set to AHCI? I didn't know there was much of a difference, and I figured if they were RAID drives, they should be set as RAID. If that's not what they should be set at, I'll change them. If it doesn't matter, I'll leave it.
I've had a couple problems starting the system up from restarts now, too.
I agree but we seem to be a step in the right direction,After setting the voltage, I had 4 successful boot-ups after powering on. The fifth time, the Windows logo froze and the system auto-rebooted. It started fine after that, though. I don't know how stable it'll be. I'm going to attempt putting the second RAM stick in and I'm going to see if it crashes or not.
I still don't consider this solved, but at least the blue screens seemed to have gone away for now. I'll have to see what happens with the other RAM stick in.
When I get a hold of the Windows disc, which is at another location, I'm going to try running startup repair and maybe that will help, too.