F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Windows BSoD

Windows BSoD

Windows BSoD

Pages (2): Previous 1 2
J
JediH3ro
Junior Member
43
10-05-2016, 06:08 AM
#11
Ram or drive are the primary concerns with an erratic behavior. You can also execute hwinfo in the background with logging enabled. This will display all hardware sensor data. Once a crash occurs, review the log for the preceding minute to identify any anomalies. If voltage or temperature problems exist, they should be evident from the logs.
J
JediH3ro
10-05-2016, 06:08 AM #11

Ram or drive are the primary concerns with an erratic behavior. You can also execute hwinfo in the background with logging enabled. This will display all hardware sensor data. Once a crash occurs, review the log for the preceding minute to identify any anomalies. If voltage or temperature problems exist, they should be evident from the logs.

P
papercut3
Member
221
10-06-2016, 10:05 PM
#12
I believe it’s likely RAM-related. I’d verify if XMP/DOCP is active, since some BIOS settings aren’t adjustable for RAM timings. The most sensible approach would be to (optionally reset CMOS), configure the BIOS to default settings, enable XMP/DOCP only (and PBO if you’re using AMD), and run a RAM test application. Personally, I haven’t found any tools that reliably check 95% stable RAM. AIDA64 Extreme’s memory tester appears to be the most effective for identifying errors within about ten minutes. You might try it to help pinpoint the problem.
P
papercut3
10-06-2016, 10:05 PM #12

I believe it’s likely RAM-related. I’d verify if XMP/DOCP is active, since some BIOS settings aren’t adjustable for RAM timings. The most sensible approach would be to (optionally reset CMOS), configure the BIOS to default settings, enable XMP/DOCP only (and PBO if you’re using AMD), and run a RAM test application. Personally, I haven’t found any tools that reliably check 95% stable RAM. AIDA64 Extreme’s memory tester appears to be the most effective for identifying errors within about ten minutes. You might try it to help pinpoint the problem.

B
Bonnibel
Posting Freak
794
10-07-2016, 06:22 PM
#13
I’ve tried both AIDA64 and the Windows memory diagnostic tool, and they seem to work well.
B
Bonnibel
10-07-2016, 06:22 PM #13

I’ve tried both AIDA64 and the Windows memory diagnostic tool, and they seem to work well.

Pages (2): Previous 1 2