F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems New installation - - - BSOD following fresh setup of Windows 11?

New installation - - - BSOD following fresh setup of Windows 11?

New installation - - - BSOD following fresh setup of Windows 11?

K
kittymitty69
Member
190
10-16-2021, 10:09 AM
#1
PC Specifications
Mobo: MSI X870E Carbon Wi-Fi
CPU: Ryzen 9900X3D
RAM: TeamGroup DDR5 96GB
SSD: Samsung 9100 Pro
PSU: 1000W Lian Li Platinum
This machine experienced BSOD twice after a fresh Windows 11 installation. I recently reformatted the drive and have not encountered any problems since then, except for previous issues with no hardware changes. Temperatures are normal without overclocking, though RAM remains enabled in XP mode. All drivers appear current, including Windows 11 24H2. Thank you ahead of time!
Here are my two minidumps in .dmp format. They occurred twice today within the hour, but there were no issues yesterday.
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1...d6Kp4zvDku
K
kittymitty69
10-16-2021, 10:09 AM #1

PC Specifications
Mobo: MSI X870E Carbon Wi-Fi
CPU: Ryzen 9900X3D
RAM: TeamGroup DDR5 96GB
SSD: Samsung 9100 Pro
PSU: 1000W Lian Li Platinum
This machine experienced BSOD twice after a fresh Windows 11 installation. I recently reformatted the drive and have not encountered any problems since then, except for previous issues with no hardware changes. Temperatures are normal without overclocking, though RAM remains enabled in XP mode. All drivers appear current, including Windows 11 24H2. Thank you ahead of time!
Here are my two minidumps in .dmp format. They occurred twice today within the hour, but there were no issues yesterday.
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1...d6Kp4zvDku

F
Fluxtrance68
Junior Member
8
10-17-2021, 01:04 PM
#2
Welcome to the forums, newcomer!
I notice pci.sys is linked to your BSoD. Have you reinstalled the OS and created a bootable USB installer? Are you installing drivers for your platform via an elevated command—right-click the installer and run it as Administrator?
What is your motherboard's BIOS version? Do you have a discrete GPU in your build?
F
Fluxtrance68
10-17-2021, 01:04 PM #2

Welcome to the forums, newcomer!
I notice pci.sys is linked to your BSoD. Have you reinstalled the OS and created a bootable USB installer? Are you installing drivers for your platform via an elevated command—right-click the installer and run it as Administrator?
What is your motherboard's BIOS version? Do you have a discrete GPU in your build?

T
Texas1047
Posting Freak
889
10-17-2021, 09:12 PM
#3
both checks are identical. The Qualcomm Bluetooth driver did not acknowledge a power request.
update the driver: https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/MPG-X870...ort#driver
search under LAN drivers for Qualcomm NCM865 BlueTooth Drivers
release date: 2025-03-14
T
Texas1047
10-17-2021, 09:12 PM #3

both checks are identical. The Qualcomm Bluetooth driver did not acknowledge a power request.
update the driver: https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/MPG-X870...ort#driver
search under LAN drivers for Qualcomm NCM865 BlueTooth Drivers
release date: 2025-03-14

F
Fretti0_YTB
Member
196
10-19-2021, 07:15 PM
#4
I really value the assistance provided! I’m now confident enough to set up my new GPU with the ASUS TUF 5080 OC.
I’m a bit embarrassed that I missed the chance to fix the faulty driver. I tried bluescreenview but got sidetracked. Although I’ve worked in IT for years and mostly handle INTUNE/AVD, I just used WinDbg and ran !analyze -v to verify your findings—same results as before. Is this a standard approach or would you suggest an alternative method?
Thanks again!
F
Fretti0_YTB
10-19-2021, 07:15 PM #4

I really value the assistance provided! I’m now confident enough to set up my new GPU with the ASUS TUF 5080 OC.
I’m a bit embarrassed that I missed the chance to fix the faulty driver. I tried bluescreenview but got sidetracked. Although I’ve worked in IT for years and mostly handle INTUNE/AVD, I just used WinDbg and ran !analyze -v to verify your findings—same results as before. Is this a standard approach or would you suggest an alternative method?
Thanks again!

H
Heroteddy
Member
203
10-22-2021, 11:55 PM
#5
doing irp on the irp number now works for a mini dump. Previously, it was only available during a kernel dump. Many users are facing issues with a clean install. It seems Windows is detecting the hardware and pulling outdated drivers that don’t work with the new power settings, causing bugchecks during clean installs. You might need to check the Microsoft catalog for an old driver compatible with your setup. This approach is quicker and easier to verify if your motherboard vendor had an update. Noticing numerous bugchecks in older Wi-Fi and Bluetooth drivers from various vendors. At least with a kernel dump, you can review the logs and identify the errors.
H
Heroteddy
10-22-2021, 11:55 PM #5

doing irp on the irp number now works for a mini dump. Previously, it was only available during a kernel dump. Many users are facing issues with a clean install. It seems Windows is detecting the hardware and pulling outdated drivers that don’t work with the new power settings, causing bugchecks during clean installs. You might need to check the Microsoft catalog for an old driver compatible with your setup. This approach is quicker and easier to verify if your motherboard vendor had an update. Noticing numerous bugchecks in older Wi-Fi and Bluetooth drivers from various vendors. At least with a kernel dump, you can review the logs and identify the errors.