F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Are you experiencing repeated critical crashes during startup and browser display problems?

Are you experiencing repeated critical crashes during startup and browser display problems?

Are you experiencing repeated critical crashes during startup and browser display problems?

M
minerboy671
Member
61
03-13-2016, 09:08 PM
#1
This is a new PC.


The issues are:

BSOD ("CRITICAL_PROCESS_DIED") after booting the computer
Brand new PC
– built
2 weeks ago
by me.
Already sent to
service
, where they
reinstalled Windows, checked the CPU, GPU, and RAM
, and reinstalled drivers.
BSOD "CRITICAL_PROCESS_DIED" occurs randomly within 1-10 minutes after startup
.
If the computer runs past this initial period without a BSOD, it remains
stable for hours
without issues.
Display issues in the browser
When
scrolling web pages or switching tabs
, sometimes content does not load properly.
Occasionally, a
part of the old tab remains "stuck" and visible on the new tab
.
It looks as if the screen does not refresh correctly.
What I've already tried:

Service tested all components (CPU, GPU, RAM), reinstalled the system, and updated drivers.
Ran system integrity checks:
sfc /scannow
– no errors found.
chkdsk /f /r
– no disk issues detected.
Tested different GPU drivers
(latest, older versions, and beta drivers).
The issue
still persists
, despite system reinstallation and hardware checks.
I don't understand what's causing the issues, need PC mastermind for it,
M
minerboy671
03-13-2016, 09:08 PM #1

This is a new PC.


The issues are:

BSOD ("CRITICAL_PROCESS_DIED") after booting the computer
Brand new PC
– built
2 weeks ago
by me.
Already sent to
service
, where they
reinstalled Windows, checked the CPU, GPU, and RAM
, and reinstalled drivers.
BSOD "CRITICAL_PROCESS_DIED" occurs randomly within 1-10 minutes after startup
.
If the computer runs past this initial period without a BSOD, it remains
stable for hours
without issues.
Display issues in the browser
When
scrolling web pages or switching tabs
, sometimes content does not load properly.
Occasionally, a
part of the old tab remains "stuck" and visible on the new tab
.
It looks as if the screen does not refresh correctly.
What I've already tried:

Service tested all components (CPU, GPU, RAM), reinstalled the system, and updated drivers.
Ran system integrity checks:
sfc /scannow
– no errors found.
chkdsk /f /r
– no disk issues detected.
Tested different GPU drivers
(latest, older versions, and beta drivers).
The issue
still persists
, despite system reinstallation and hardware checks.
I don't understand what's causing the issues, need PC mastermind for it,

K
kongkong82
Junior Member
18
03-14-2016, 04:20 AM
#2
What kind of hardware is this?
Is the BIOS current?
Which process failed?
K
kongkong82
03-14-2016, 04:20 AM #2

What kind of hardware is this?
Is the BIOS current?
Which process failed?

K
kaaskotskikker
Posting Freak
795
03-14-2016, 05:00 AM
#3
If you are using an overclock, set the PC to defaults (reset the BIOS).
I believe the power supply is solid, trustworthy, and able to deliver more than the required watts for your components, giving extra margin.
My initial steps would be:
Download memtest64 and get a USB memory stick.
https://www.memtest86.com/
Make sure all hardware is correctly installed—GPU, RAM, CPU—and remove any USB devices except keyboard and mouse. Also, disconnect hard drives or SSDs since they aren’t needed for the test.
Check that the PSU is firmly connected to the motherboard; ensure all connections are secure. If it’s a modular PSU, verify its end connection too.
Execute memtest64 for an extended time (perform a burn-in test, run it for several hours). If errors appear, let it finish the pass, as this will clear any driver or Windows issues. It tests memory and CPU to some extent, while the GPU acts as a passive adapter during testing and won’t heat up.
Memtest confirms whether your RAM is healthy and reports any faulty addresses.
If memtest succeeds, continue with regular checks: after 30 minutes per hour, reconnect the storage drive holding Windows and run a burn-in test under Windows for the GPU (e.g., multiple Cinebench 24 GPU tests).
K
kaaskotskikker
03-14-2016, 05:00 AM #3

If you are using an overclock, set the PC to defaults (reset the BIOS).
I believe the power supply is solid, trustworthy, and able to deliver more than the required watts for your components, giving extra margin.
My initial steps would be:
Download memtest64 and get a USB memory stick.
https://www.memtest86.com/
Make sure all hardware is correctly installed—GPU, RAM, CPU—and remove any USB devices except keyboard and mouse. Also, disconnect hard drives or SSDs since they aren’t needed for the test.
Check that the PSU is firmly connected to the motherboard; ensure all connections are secure. If it’s a modular PSU, verify its end connection too.
Execute memtest64 for an extended time (perform a burn-in test, run it for several hours). If errors appear, let it finish the pass, as this will clear any driver or Windows issues. It tests memory and CPU to some extent, while the GPU acts as a passive adapter during testing and won’t heat up.
Memtest confirms whether your RAM is healthy and reports any faulty addresses.
If memtest succeeds, continue with regular checks: after 30 minutes per hour, reconnect the storage drive holding Windows and run a burn-in test under Windows for the GPU (e.g., multiple Cinebench 24 GPU tests).

R
59
03-14-2016, 11:55 AM
#4
BIOS is current.
PC Specifications
Mobo: MSI PRO B760-P WIFI DDR4
CPU: Intel Core i5-14600KF
GPU: Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC 12GB GDDR6
RAM: Lexar THOR 32GB (2 x 16GB) 3600MHz DDR4 CL18
PSU: Chieftec Vita BPX-750-S
SSD: WD Blue SN580 M.2 NVMe 2TB
CPU Cooler: ENDORFY Fera 5 Dual Fan
R
RAGINGKODGRIMM
03-14-2016, 11:55 AM #4

BIOS is current.
PC Specifications
Mobo: MSI PRO B760-P WIFI DDR4
CPU: Intel Core i5-14600KF
GPU: Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC 12GB GDDR6
RAM: Lexar THOR 32GB (2 x 16GB) 3600MHz DDR4 CL18
PSU: Chieftec Vita BPX-750-S
SSD: WD Blue SN580 M.2 NVMe 2TB
CPU Cooler: ENDORFY Fera 5 Dual Fan