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Constant BSODs

chrisA044

n00b
Joined
Apr 2, 2016
Messages
5
I had the same issue on my previous build. I changed the mother board, cpu, video card. Now it starting up again. All I can think of is the psychical CD I have from burning my paid copy of windows 7 professional is scatched so installs are not perfect and maybe missing files but still installs... here's my error report from the BSOD

Problem signature:
Problem Event Name: BlueScreen
OS Version: 6.1.7601.2.1.0.256.48
Locale ID: 1033

Additional information about the problem:
BCCode: 1a
BCP1: 0000000000005003
BCP2: FFFFF70001080000
BCP3: 000000000000DBA7
BCP4: 0000DBA91001B74E
OS Version: 6_1_7601
Service Pack: 1_0
Product: 256_1

Files that help describe the problem:
C:\Windows\Minidump\040216-21340-01.dmp
C:\Users\------\AppData\Local\Temp\WER-23400-0.sysdata.xml



I tried chkdsk constantly all it does is repair the corrupted files from the BSODs I get, but does not fix the BSODs... I've checked temps I am not running hot either, video card is cool to the touch even. All I could think of is the PSU or memory, which I first did replace those as I also had BSODs before and my first thing I changed was memory which did not resolve the issue.

Current build
ASRock ASRock Fatal1ty Gaming Fatal1ty Z97 Killer LGA 1150 Intel Z97 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX Intel Motherboard

EVGA 02G-P4-3757-KR G-SYNC Support GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB 128-Bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 FTW w/ ACX Cooling Video Card

Intel Core i5-4590 Haswell Quad-Core 3.3 GHz LGA 1150 84W BX80646I54590 Desktop Processor Intel HD Graphics 4600

The above parts are less than 3 months old.

CORSAIR Vengeance 16GB (4 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) Desktop Memory Model CMZ16GX3M4A1600C9B

SanDisk Ultra II 240GB SATA III 2.5-Inch 7mm Height Solid State Drive (SSD) with Read Up To 550MB/s- SDSSDHII-240G-G25

I already did tons of research on the codes, many told me to reinstall video drivers, did that. It does not resolve the BSODs, but it does resolve the corruption on the display drivers caused by the BSODs.
 
You need to install either Windows Debugging Tools or WhoCrashed to analyze the BSOD minidumps.
BSOD codes do not matter much until you know the whole crash chain.
 
0x1a is a memory management error with BCP1 being 0x5003 indicating a hardware issue.

Have you run any memory tests?

As for the CD being scratched bad enough to corrupt any files, it's highly unlikely that you would be able to finish the installation if that were the case.
 
0x1a is a memory management error with BCP1 being 0x5003 indicating a hardware issue.

Have you run any memory tests?

As for the CD being scratched bad enough to corrupt any files, it's highly unlikely that you would be able to finish the installation if that were the case.


Yea I ran memory tests many times. I haven't done one in a while so I'll do it again... when you say memory could it be the SSD since it is memory flash based hard drive or could it just be the RAM?
 
0x1a is a memory management error with BCP1 being 0x5003 indicating a hardware issue.

Have you run any memory tests?

As for the CD being scratched bad enough to corrupt any files, it's highly unlikely that you would be able to finish the installation if that were the case.

Did a mem test, no errors found... no idea what else to try.
 
you RAM is the same as my LP RAM(CML16GX3M4A1600C9B) and I needed higher voltage and to manually set the timings to get mine stable. try adding .1v(1.5v to 1.6).
 
0x1a is a memory management error with BCP1 being 0x5003 indicating a hardware issue.

Have you run any memory tests?

As for the CD being scratched bad enough to corrupt any files, it's highly unlikely that you would be able to finish the installation if that were the case.

+1 on the memory tests. That's the first thing I would look at when troubleshooting an apparently random BSOD.

As for the CD, though, you'd be surprised. On more than one occasion, I've had a similar problem where the particular optical drive I was using did not like the Windows install media I put in it.

In the OP's case, though, I suspect this is a memory problem.
 
you RAM is the same as my LP RAM(CML16GX3M4A1600C9B) and I needed higher voltage and to manually set the timings to get mine stable. try adding .1v(1.5v to 1.6).

I think I can check the bios for voltage. But I remember checking everything when I installed the new build 3 months ago and everything seem to be right but I'll double check now thanks!

I see they're suppose to be at 1.5v, if I raise it up to 1.6 would I cause more issues or even void the warranty (if not run out)?
 
Hasn't bothered mine in 4 years...
I've seen guys running at 1.65.
 
I went to Corsair and getting a new set of 4GB chips provided by RMA. Hopefully this resolves it.
 
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