F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Repeated crashes and system errors continue to escalate.

Repeated crashes and system errors continue to escalate.

Repeated crashes and system errors continue to escalate.

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Ranger6800
Member
241
09-02-2020, 11:21 PM
#1
Hello, I’m reaching out today because I’m facing a persistent and unexpected BSOD problem. Below are my system details. My PC has suddenly started showing BSODs with different stop codes, and the issues seem to intensify over time. Some crashes happen within a minute after booting, and they appear in Windows. There haven’t been any changes to my hardware or software settings. The most frequent stopcode is related to Memory Management, while others include SYSTEM SERVICE EXCEPTION and a page fault in the nonpaged area linked to dxgmms2.sys. I’ve tried several troubleshooting steps: verifying RAM placement, checking M.2 SSD and GPU connections, running Windows Memory Diagnostic with no errors, enabling/disabling XMP settings, removing two RAM sticks to use one channel, rearranging the remaining sticks, updating drivers, performing a CrystalDiskHealth check on the M.2 drive, installing all Windows updates, reinstalling the OS, and finally running CMD sfc/scannow. All system temperatures were normal during the scan. I also tried a clean Windows installation and reinstalled drivers. Recently, I ran Memtest86 to test my RAM, though I couldn’t find a spare USB drive at first. Hardware list: OLOy DDR4 32GB 3600MHz Gigabyte GP-P750GM 80+ GOLD (note: prior PSU concerns), Samsung 970 EVO SSD 1TB M.2 NVMe EVGA CLC 240mm AIO MSI-MPG Z490, Intel i-7 10700k. MSI Ventus 3X RTX 3070 minidump link provided. Please let me know if this is incorrect. I’m not very experienced with these tools.
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Ranger6800
09-02-2020, 11:21 PM #1

Hello, I’m reaching out today because I’m facing a persistent and unexpected BSOD problem. Below are my system details. My PC has suddenly started showing BSODs with different stop codes, and the issues seem to intensify over time. Some crashes happen within a minute after booting, and they appear in Windows. There haven’t been any changes to my hardware or software settings. The most frequent stopcode is related to Memory Management, while others include SYSTEM SERVICE EXCEPTION and a page fault in the nonpaged area linked to dxgmms2.sys. I’ve tried several troubleshooting steps: verifying RAM placement, checking M.2 SSD and GPU connections, running Windows Memory Diagnostic with no errors, enabling/disabling XMP settings, removing two RAM sticks to use one channel, rearranging the remaining sticks, updating drivers, performing a CrystalDiskHealth check on the M.2 drive, installing all Windows updates, reinstalling the OS, and finally running CMD sfc/scannow. All system temperatures were normal during the scan. I also tried a clean Windows installation and reinstalled drivers. Recently, I ran Memtest86 to test my RAM, though I couldn’t find a spare USB drive at first. Hardware list: OLOy DDR4 32GB 3600MHz Gigabyte GP-P750GM 80+ GOLD (note: prior PSU concerns), Samsung 970 EVO SSD 1TB M.2 NVMe EVGA CLC 240mm AIO MSI-MPG Z490, Intel i-7 10700k. MSI Ventus 3X RTX 3070 minidump link provided. Please let me know if this is incorrect. I’m not very experienced with these tools.

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pbking123
Junior Member
28
09-03-2020, 07:46 AM
#2
Yes, your system has a critical component that needs attention. Replace it now to avoid failure. For stability testing, run Prime95 with small and large FFTs (check CPU load), monitor RAM and GPU stress, and measure performance metrics. Make sure the power supply is suitable before proceeding. Only after confirming the PSU can you safely swap it out.
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pbking123
09-03-2020, 07:46 AM #2

Yes, your system has a critical component that needs attention. Replace it now to avoid failure. For stability testing, run Prime95 with small and large FFTs (check CPU load), monitor RAM and GPU stress, and measure performance metrics. Make sure the power supply is suitable before proceeding. Only after confirming the PSU can you safely swap it out.

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Hagnarock
Senior Member
434
09-04-2020, 07:45 AM
#3
Consider updating the BIOS or performing a clean CMOS reset if you have the latest version. The memory issues might be unrelated to this. It could be worth checking if thermal paste has been accidentally placed in the CPU socket, as similar problems occurred with AMD builds. How recent is the system?
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Hagnarock
09-04-2020, 07:45 AM #3

Consider updating the BIOS or performing a clean CMOS reset if you have the latest version. The memory issues might be unrelated to this. It could be worth checking if thermal paste has been accidentally placed in the CPU socket, as similar problems occurred with AMD builds. How recent is the system?