F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Repeated failures continue to occur.

Repeated failures continue to occur.

Repeated failures continue to occur.

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Gurkan10
Junior Member
48
09-24-2016, 05:11 PM
#1
Hey everyone, my computer has been crashing a lot lately, roughly once each day. It usually happens due to blue screen codes, but when I search online, most of the reasons point to driver or RAM problems. I reset my RAM speed to the default and updated/reinstalled the drivers. What’s really going on? Thanks a lot!
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Gurkan10
09-24-2016, 05:11 PM #1

Hey everyone, my computer has been crashing a lot lately, roughly once each day. It usually happens due to blue screen codes, but when I search online, most of the reasons point to driver or RAM problems. I reset my RAM speed to the default and updated/reinstalled the drivers. What’s really going on? Thanks a lot!

X
xEpicSniiperz
Member
65
09-24-2016, 08:26 PM
#2
Common BSOD fixes for these types of problems.
Revert recently added drivers.
Use any diagnostics your device offers (at least a memory test).
Check that all parts aren’t overheating.
Reinstall memory.
Reset CPU connections.
Test each memory separately.
Disable GPU if available.
Remove unnecessary components one by one.
X
xEpicSniiperz
09-24-2016, 08:26 PM #2

Common BSOD fixes for these types of problems.
Revert recently added drivers.
Use any diagnostics your device offers (at least a memory test).
Check that all parts aren’t overheating.
Reinstall memory.
Reset CPU connections.
Test each memory separately.
Disable GPU if available.
Remove unnecessary components one by one.

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TdmFan92
Senior Member
602
09-25-2016, 03:47 AM
#3
Blue screens don’t trigger a crash; they’re a sign of something else. The blue screen itself isn’t the crash, but it’s like seeing dead people on the freeway—likely due to a faulty RAM stick. It seems the RAM hasn’t been overclocked yet. The next action should be testing one stick at a time. RAM is unusual for multiple failures, so if you have one working and one non-working, the issue lies with that specific stick. If all sticks fail, the problem could be elsewhere or possibly all are damaged.
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TdmFan92
09-25-2016, 03:47 AM #3

Blue screens don’t trigger a crash; they’re a sign of something else. The blue screen itself isn’t the crash, but it’s like seeing dead people on the freeway—likely due to a faulty RAM stick. It seems the RAM hasn’t been overclocked yet. The next action should be testing one stick at a time. RAM is unusual for multiple failures, so if you have one working and one non-working, the issue lies with that specific stick. If all sticks fail, the problem could be elsewhere or possibly all are damaged.