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Windows 10 becomes unresponsive after prolonged inactivity—could it be a CPU problem?

Windows 10 becomes unresponsive after prolonged inactivity—could it be a CPU problem?

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SuperScout345
Member
217
02-09-2020, 11:48 PM
#1
Hello my PC: Your system runs at 108500K with a 4800MHz clock, using 2x16GB DDR4 memory and the GSKILL 3200MHz XMP profile from Seasonic. You’re using a Gigabyte Rtx 3090, Aorus Z490 Pro, and have a 1TB SSD. Windows 10 is updated to the latest version, and everything seems stable so far. Your PC has been running nonstop for about five to six hours, and you’ve noticed occasional crashes when opening Google Chrome—mouse control works but the browser freezes completely. After a hard reset, it restarts normally. There’s no error log in Event Viewer. It looks like a hardware problem might be causing the instability, possibly related to the graphics card or RAM. You’re considering running OCCT or realbench for further diagnostics. It could help to perform those tests after the incident, but if you suspect a hardware fault, it’s best to investigate further before proceeding.
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SuperScout345
02-09-2020, 11:48 PM #1

Hello my PC: Your system runs at 108500K with a 4800MHz clock, using 2x16GB DDR4 memory and the GSKILL 3200MHz XMP profile from Seasonic. You’re using a Gigabyte Rtx 3090, Aorus Z490 Pro, and have a 1TB SSD. Windows 10 is updated to the latest version, and everything seems stable so far. Your PC has been running nonstop for about five to six hours, and you’ve noticed occasional crashes when opening Google Chrome—mouse control works but the browser freezes completely. After a hard reset, it restarts normally. There’s no error log in Event Viewer. It looks like a hardware problem might be causing the instability, possibly related to the graphics card or RAM. You’re considering running OCCT or realbench for further diagnostics. It could help to perform those tests after the incident, but if you suspect a hardware fault, it’s best to investigate further before proceeding.

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Stunflix
Member
174
02-20-2020, 05:47 PM
#2
I believe the problem isn't hardware-related—it's just Windows 10. Occasionally upgrading can cause unexpected issues. I recommend saving all your data and performing a full reinstall.
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Stunflix
02-20-2020, 05:47 PM #2

I believe the problem isn't hardware-related—it's just Windows 10. Occasionally upgrading can cause unexpected issues. I recommend saving all your data and performing a full reinstall.

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FELIPE369
Member
234
02-20-2020, 06:16 PM
#3
Also someone mentioned various potential reasons—everything could be the cause. PSU, RAM, disk, timing problems, faulty hardware, overheating (any clues?), overclocking (are you doing that?), software glitch, mismatched RAM (are all details consistent?)... So it might be my hardware issue?
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FELIPE369
02-20-2020, 06:16 PM #3

Also someone mentioned various potential reasons—everything could be the cause. PSU, RAM, disk, timing problems, faulty hardware, overheating (any clues?), overclocking (are you doing that?), software glitch, mismatched RAM (are all details consistent?)... So it might be my hardware issue?

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Brady514166
Junior Member
43
02-22-2020, 07:06 AM
#4
Could the problem lie with hibernation? I usually disable it since I don’t require it and it conserves storage space. It might help to verify if hibernation is enabled, and turning it off could resolve the issue.
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Brady514166
02-22-2020, 07:06 AM #4

Could the problem lie with hibernation? I usually disable it since I don’t require it and it conserves storage space. It might help to verify if hibernation is enabled, and turning it off could resolve the issue.

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dsralph
Junior Member
12
02-22-2020, 01:19 PM
#5
This situation shouldn't occur. It might be another side effect from the latest Windows update. Several users have shared issues with Windows after the update. I've experienced similar problems myself after installing the newest Windows update. I frequently encounter BSODs and random game crashes now. This hasn't happened before. It's not a hardware malfunction. We should wait for Microsoft to resolve it. In the meantime, you should consider updating all your components—BIOS, chipset drivers, etc.
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dsralph
02-22-2020, 01:19 PM #5

This situation shouldn't occur. It might be another side effect from the latest Windows update. Several users have shared issues with Windows after the update. I've experienced similar problems myself after installing the newest Windows update. I frequently encounter BSODs and random game crashes now. This hasn't happened before. It's not a hardware malfunction. We should wait for Microsoft to resolve it. In the meantime, you should consider updating all your components—BIOS, chipset drivers, etc.

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mailliam
Junior Member
31
02-22-2020, 05:00 PM
#6
Hello, I'm now operating on Windows 10 version 1809. Experiencing issues over the past six months: occasional crashes.
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mailliam
02-22-2020, 05:00 PM #6

Hello, I'm now operating on Windows 10 version 1809. Experiencing issues over the past six months: occasional crashes.