Yes, a nvlddmkm.sys crash could indicate an issue with the power supply unit, motherboard, or graphics card.
Yes, a nvlddmkm.sys crash could indicate an issue with the power supply unit, motherboard, or graphics card.
System details: Windows 10 Home, 64-bit CPU, Aorus 1080ti graphics, Asus Strix Z370-f cooler, Corsair H100i RGB pro, HX750 PSU, Corsair Vengeance RGB PRO 4x8 RAM, 32GB, 3000MHz. The machine has been idle for about four to five months since the previous GPU failed, which caused issues. A new secondhand GPU was installed, and everything functioned normally initially. Recently, I encountered persistent BSODs after installing it. After updating drivers and reinstalling, the problem persisted. Removing the GPU completely resolved the issue—disconnecting displays and using the MOBO interface worked fine. Now the system is unstable; during startup it reports a CPU over voltage error (4.064v), memory voltage 4.064v, +12v rail 24.288v, +5v rail 10.120v, +3.3v rail 2.608v. The motherboard temperature is -57°C. It seems unrelated to GPU drivers. A forum thread suggested the error might stem from a faulty PSU. What’s happening? Please advise.
Video_TDR_Failure means the GPU is stuck even after the system restarts or driver updates. We can't pinpoint the exact cause. If this happens with another GPU, it's probably a motherboard or power supply issue, but we can't be sure without trying alternatives. If everything in the PC stopped working completely, performance would be severely impacted.