BSOD error ?
BSOD error ?
Hi guys,
I've been holding off on seeking help on this topic because it's a minor inconvenience I've been experiencing for a while now, but I've decided to finally make a post about it. - today I received a BSOD (for the first time) with the error code "VIDEO_SCHEDULER_INTERNAL_ERROR". Some back story...I rebuilt my PC a few months ago and a couple odd things have been happening. First off, my PC will occasionally lag (mouse cursor moves extremely slow, things take ages to load) and the only fix is just restarting my PC and then it's completely fine.. usually for an extensive period of time too. Sometimes this will happen every couple days, then I'll go a month without it happening at all. The second thing that happens more frequently (a few times a week) is when I boot my PC, everything turns on but have no display to my monitor.. however, I can wait it out and it'll eventually boot usually within a minute or two and everything works fine after that.
I believe due to finally getting this BSOD error tonight, it confirmed my suspicions that this is likely a GPU issue. I realize this is a pretty broad issue and it can be a multitude of things that can be a fix. I've already ran a sfc /scannow in the command prompt and windows found corrupt files/repaired them, but that's pretty much all I've done so far. It's hard to say what specifically may work since this issue only appears sometimes on a weekly basis, so I guess I'll try everything you guys recommend and hopefully don't see it happen again in the future.
Specs:
Mobo: MSI Pro X-870-p
CPU: AMD Ryzen 9800X3D
RAM: 64GB G-SKILL DDR5-6400 CL32-39-39-102 1.40V
GPU: MSI 4070 Super
OS; Windows 11 Pro
PSU: EVGA Supernova 750W
When experiencing BSODs, the first step is to turn off all overclocks. If you're using XMP to boost your RAM to 6400MHz, remove that XMP setting and let the RAM operate at its default speed (likely around 4800MHz for DDR5). If the system remains stable, it suggests a RAM clock issue.
The specifications for your Ryzen 7 9800X3D indicate AMD only ensures stability when the RAM runs up to 5600MHz. While many setups can run smoothly at higher speeds, stability isn't guaranteed. This makes removing the RAM overclock a good test.
If your system works at 4800MHz, try an XMP profile set to 5600MHz. If it remains stable, the issue is resolved. Then gradually increase the RAM speed until you encounter instability.