F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems System continues to malfunction post-repair.

System continues to malfunction post-repair.

System continues to malfunction post-repair.

_
_DarkStone_
Member
227
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM
#1
I recently disassembled my PC for safer shipping because I was relocating. I’ve done this before without any problems. I took out the graphics card, RAM, and CPU cooler, placing them all back in their original packaging. The remaining components stayed inside the case. I transported everything roughly 3.5k miles in the back seat, hoping they’d move a bit. After reassembly, it initially worked but then would randomly crash to the blue screen of death and restart repeatedly. It functioned briefly before freezing again, showing different error codes each time—like Critical_process_died or system_service_exception. I suspect the issue might be related to the hard drives, especially since they were left in the case. All my files appear fine. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated; this persistent crashing is really frustrating. Thanks.
_
_DarkStone_
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM #1

I recently disassembled my PC for safer shipping because I was relocating. I’ve done this before without any problems. I took out the graphics card, RAM, and CPU cooler, placing them all back in their original packaging. The remaining components stayed inside the case. I transported everything roughly 3.5k miles in the back seat, hoping they’d move a bit. After reassembly, it initially worked but then would randomly crash to the blue screen of death and restart repeatedly. It functioned briefly before freezing again, showing different error codes each time—like Critical_process_died or system_service_exception. I suspect the issue might be related to the hard drives, especially since they were left in the case. All my files appear fine. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated; this persistent crashing is really frustrating. Thanks.

I
iKindredNice
Member
61
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM
#2
I would begin by repositioning the RAM.
I
iKindredNice
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM #2

I would begin by repositioning the RAM.

P
Pabblo
Junior Member
26
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM
#3
No, I don't know about that. Can you clarify what you're asking?
P
Pabblo
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM #3

No, I don't know about that. Can you clarify what you're asking?

N
nurijoker5
Junior Member
19
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM
#4
Windows runs on an M.2 SSD. The majority of my remaining files reside on a mechanical hard drive.
N
nurijoker5
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM #4

Windows runs on an M.2 SSD. The majority of my remaining files reside on a mechanical hard drive.

_
_imGosu
Member
65
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM
#5
Disconnect your mechanical drives and observe if the issues disappear. If unsuccessful, launch a command prompt and execute; SFC /scannow That will perform a file integrity check on your primary boot drive.
_
_imGosu
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM #5

Disconnect your mechanical drives and observe if the issues disappear. If unsuccessful, launch a command prompt and execute; SFC /scannow That will perform a file integrity check on your primary boot drive.

C
Christina3656
Member
124
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM
#6
The initial two codes relate to software issues, often involving drivers, Windows crashes, or problematic updates. You might attempt to fix the installation using bootCD (the Windows installer). The final one is connected to RAM problems, possibly linked to the other two.
C
Christina3656
04-09-2022, 12:00 AM #6

The initial two codes relate to software issues, often involving drivers, Windows crashes, or problematic updates. You might attempt to fix the installation using bootCD (the Windows installer). The final one is connected to RAM problems, possibly linked to the other two.