Hot!Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU?

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Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/03 01:53:09 (permalink)

Sushihunter
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OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
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LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
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#61
Sajin
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/03 02:10:41 (permalink)
None of those .dmp files contain the 124 blue screen code. If you get a blue screen containing the 124 error code please upload that one.
post edited by Sajin - 2016/08/03 02:13:26


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Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/03 03:46:10 (permalink)
Hey, I found the dmp file you wanted 
 
http://sabercathost.com/2GHi/080116-49904-01.dmp
 

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
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Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
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Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/03 07:47:46 (permalink)

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#64
Cool GTX
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/03 07:53:34 (permalink)
Sushihunter
Got a new one for you...
 
http://sabercathost.com/1QGT/080316-52494-01.dmp
 


Morning
 
Did you do the "BIOS Dance"  ---- my post #56 ?

1) ASUS Z97-WS, i7-4790K@4.9GHz,  2-Way-SLI - EVGA GTX Titan X SC - EK block/plate, Custom loop, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR3-2400, Samsumg Pro 850 SSD, 2-2TB WD Black, Phanteks Primo Case, Win 10 Pro 64bit, 4K Acer XB280HK monitor, EVGA 1600 P2 Supernova PSU, Fire Strike 1.1 = 21,842  
2) EVGA X99 Classified, I7-5960X, 2- Titan X Pascal, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR4-3000, Intel NVMe PCIe 750 SSD, Win10 Pro,PSU EVGA 1200 P2 Folding 2.5M PPD    Affiliate code 05MLLDCG6B  
 
 
 

 
 
 
#65
Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/03 08:33:04 (permalink)
Cool GTX
Sushihunter
Got a new one for you...
 
http://sabercathost.com/1QGT/080316-52494-01.dmp
 

Morning
 
Did you do the "BIOS Dance"  ---- my post #56 ?




Hi: No, haven't had a chance yet, hopefully I can do it later tonight.
Having had a number of Asus MB's over the years, I quite agree about the Asus BIOS "issues".
 
Thanks!

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#66
Sajin
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/03 10:59:57 (permalink)
Ok, I checked out the .dmp file with windbg and this is what I found...
 
*******************************************************************************
* *
* Bugcheck Analysis *
* *
*******************************************************************************
Use !analyze -v to get detailed debugging information.
BugCheck 124, {0, 8d9c98fc, 0, 0}
Probably caused by : GenuineIntel
Followup: MachineOwner
---------
3: kd> !analyze -v
*******************************************************************************
* *
* Bugcheck Analysis *
* *
*******************************************************************************
WHEA_UNCORRECTABLE_ERROR (124)
A fatal hardware error has occurred. Parameter 1 identifies the type of error
source that reported the error. Parameter 2 holds the address of the
WHEA_ERROR_RECORD structure that describes the error conditon.
Arguments:
Arg1: 00000000, Machine Check Exception
Arg2: 8d9c98fc, Address of the WHEA_ERROR_RECORD structure.
Arg3: 00000000, High order 32-bits of the MCi_STATUS value.
Arg4: 00000000, Low order 32-bits of the MCi_STATUS value.
Debugging Details:
------------------

DUMP_CLASS: 1
DUMP_QUALIFIER: 400
BUILD_VERSION_STRING: 7601.23455.x86fre.win7sp1_ldr.160516-0600
DUMP_TYPE: 2
BUGCHECK_P1: 0
BUGCHECK_P2: ffffffff8d9c98fc
BUGCHECK_P3: 0
BUGCHECK_P4: 0
BUGCHECK_STR: 0x124_GenuineIntel
CPU_COUNT: 4
CPU_MHZ: 965
CPU_VENDOR: GenuineIntel
CPU_FAMILY: 6
CPU_MODEL: f
CPU_STEPPING: b
CPU_MICROCODE: 6,f,b,0 (F,M,S,R) SIG: B6'00000000 (cache) 0'00000000 (init)
CUSTOMER_CRASH_COUNT: 1
DEFAULT_BUCKET_ID: WIN7_DRIVER_FAULT
PROCESS_NAME: System
CURRENT_IRQL: 0
ANALYSIS_SESSION_HOST: DESKTOP-RCO722P
ANALYSIS_SESSION_TIME: 08-03-2016 12:04:16.0886
ANALYSIS_VERSION: 10.0.10586.567 amd64fre
STACK_TEXT:
88b85cc4 831267f7 8d9c98e0 831c0208 831c0200 nt!WheapCreateTriageDumpFromPreviousSession+0x32
88b85ce4 83127625 831c0200 8d9c98e0 831c0230 nt!WheapProcessWorkQueueItem+0x56
88b85d00 830d230b 831c0200 00000000 85dea030 nt!WheapWorkQueueWorkerRoutine+0x1f
88b85d50 8326145b 00000001 b9629f16 00000000 nt!ExpWorkerThread+0x10d
88b85d90 831059c9 830d21fe 00000001 00000000 nt!PspSystemThreadStartup+0x9e
00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 nt!KiThreadStartup+0x19

STACK_COMMAND: kb
THREAD_SHA1_HASH_MOD_FUNC: 66ca5dd7f6e07821a2bd4ba174d8a04fd8c5c006
THREAD_SHA1_HASH_MOD_FUNC_OFFSET: d73e5cc55c44b167f77894430e6ee2a68dcaef20
THREAD_SHA1_HASH_MOD: ee8fcf1fb60cb6e3e2f60ddbed2ec02b5748a693
FOLLOWUP_NAME: MachineOwner
MODULE_NAME: GenuineIntel
IMAGE_NAME: GenuineIntel
DEBUG_FLR_IMAGE_TIMESTAMP: 0
IMAGE_VERSION:
FAILURE_BUCKET_ID: 0x124_GenuineIntel_PROCESSOR_BUS_PRV
BUCKET_ID: 0x124_GenuineIntel_PROCESSOR_BUS_PRV
PRIMARY_PROBLEM_CLASS: 0x124_GenuineIntel_PROCESSOR_BUS_PRV
TARGET_TIME: 2016-08-02T05:39:07.000Z
OSBUILD: 7601
OSSERVICEPACK: 1000
SERVICEPACK_NUMBER: 0
OS_REVISION: 0
SUITE_MASK: 272
PRODUCT_TYPE: 1
OSPLATFORM_TYPE: x86
OSNAME: Windows 7
OSEDITION: Windows 7 WinNt (Service Pack 1) TerminalServer SingleUserTS
OS_LOCALE:
USER_LCID: 0
OSBUILD_TIMESTAMP: 2016-05-16 16:11:27
BUILDDATESTAMP_STR: 160516-0600
BUILDLAB_STR: win7sp1_ldr
BUILDOSVER_STR: 6.1.7601.23455.x86fre.win7sp1_ldr.160516-0600
ANALYSIS_SESSION_ELAPSED_TIME: 1d4
ANALYSIS_SOURCE: KM
FAILURE_ID_HASH_STRING: km:0x124_genuineintel_processor_bus_prv
FAILURE_ID_HASH: {f507296b-20ca-dc3b-cebf-36d51efdb93d}
Followup: MachineOwner
---------
3: kd> !errrec ffffffff8d9c98fc
===============================================================================
Common Platform Error Record @ 8d9c98fc
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Record Id : 01d1ec802a1deba5
Severity : Fatal (1)
Length : 928
Creator : Microsoft
Notify Type : Machine Check Exception
Timestamp : 8/2/2016 5:39:07 (UTC)
Flags : 0x00000002 PreviousError
===============================================================================
Section 0 : Processor Generic
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Descriptor @ 8d9c997c
Section @ 8d9c9a54
Offset : 344
Length : 192
Flags : 0x00000001 Primary
Severity : Fatal
Proc. Type : x86/x64
Instr. Set : x86
Error Type : BUS error
Operation : Generic
Flags : 0x00
Level : 0
CPU Version : 0x00000000000006fb
Processor ID : 0x0000000000000000
===============================================================================
Section 1 : x86/x64 Processor Specific
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Descriptor @ 8d9c99c4
Section @ 8d9c9b14
Offset : 536
Length : 128
Flags : 0x00000000
Severity : Fatal
Local APIC Id : 0x0000000000000000
CPU Id : fb 06 00 00 00 08 04 00 - bd e3 00 00 ff fb eb bf
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 - 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 - 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
Proc. Info 0 @ 8d9c9b14
===============================================================================
Section 2 : x86/x64 MCA
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Descriptor @ 8d9c9a0c
Section @ 8d9c9b94
Offset : 664
Length : 264
Flags : 0x00000000
Severity : Fatal
Error : BUSL0_SRC_ERR_M_NOTIMEOUT_ERR (Proc 0 Bank 0)
Status : 0xf200084000000800
 
The above bolded error (BUSL0_SRC_ERR_M_NOTIMEOUT_ERR) means the processor sent out a read request to L0 cache and there was a delay in return (either a cache miss, or invalid data in cache). So I was definitely right about it being cpu related.
 
Do you have both 4-pin cpu power connectors plugged into the motherboard? If only using one please plug in the other and retest the system.
 

 


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Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/03 20:08:29 (permalink)

Sajin:
 
Great diagnosis - most of it far above my pay grade 
As you can see, both 4-pin connectors are plugged in. I took the photo a minute ago after reading your last post.

 
Just to be on the safe side, I will un-plug them and re-seat them, same with the plug on the PSU unit.
PS: Notice my nice shiny new EVGA 750 Watt G2 PSU 
 
Before you ask, the old PSU was plugged in here as well.
 
Also, I've seen some good deals on Craigslist for LGA 775 CPU's As soon as I have some extra cash, I think I will grab one.
Someone even has a Q8200 for only $10  There are a number of others as well in the $20 to $70 range, including one guy who has 22 CPU's for $20!!!
 
Sushihunter
  
 
post edited by Sushihunter - 2016/08/03 20:23:03

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#68
Sajin
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/03 20:15:48 (permalink)
Yep, looks like they are both connected. Time to try Cool GTX bios dance.


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Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/03 20:32:56 (permalink)
Sajin
Yep, looks like they are both connected. Time to try Cool GTX bios dance.




Yes. I do plan on doing this.
 
Experience has shown me that I need to be well rested and really think about this before jumping into the BIOS.
I'm not really hesitating - just want to make sure I do it right, as I haven't spent much time in the BIOS since I set the computer up in late 2007.
Amazing how you forget the details when you haven't done it for a while!
 

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#70
Sajin
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/04 00:04:05 (permalink)
I'd just try a simple reset of the bios back to default settings to see if that fixes the issue or not. Enter bios, press f5, select yes to load defaults, press f10 to save and exit the bios.


#71
Sajin
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/04 00:49:37 (permalink)
Sushihunter
Also, I've seen some good deals on Craigslist for LGA 775 CPU's As soon as I have some extra cash, I think I will grab one.
Someone even has a Q8200 for only $10  There are a number of others as well in the $20 to $70 range, including one guy who has 22 CPU's for $20!!!
 
Sushihunter




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Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/04 03:05:25 (permalink)
Well, well, well...  Look what I found:
 

I got this in an old system that a friend of mine gave me a while ago.
Good news: It's an exact match for the CPU I have installed.
Bad news: It is out of one of two systems I was given - one of which was hit by lightning. Don't know which one.
Good news, is that both PSU's powered up when plugged in.
Bad news, didn't have a chance to hook it up with a hard drive & monitor to test it.
Good news, this is the system the memory I added to my system came from - it's tested good.
Wish me luck!
 
The BIOS Dance® will have to wait for another night - got tied up with unexpected company tonight - haven't even had time to eat more than an orange...
 
Thanks everyone! 
 
Sushihunter
 

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#73
Sajin
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/04 10:00:39 (permalink)



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Cool GTX
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/04 10:11:31 (permalink)
Sajin
I'd just try a simple reset of the bios back to default settings to see if that fixes the issue or not. Enter bios, press f5, select yes to load defaults, press f10 to save and exit the bios.


 
 
*** Step 2 is very important ***

Time to do the "BIOS dance"

1) Boot into BIOS
2) Copy your current settings - Camera works nice or save a profile if that option is available on your MB
3) select default settings
4) save BIOS
5) reboot & enter BIOS (again)
6) edit BIOS (put your changes back in) (or load from a saved profile)
7) save BIOS (again) make the changes you need like memory voltage
8) Reboot PC
 
This is the "BIOS dance" --- just a phrase I coined, cause that is a lot of steps

1) ASUS Z97-WS, i7-4790K@4.9GHz,  2-Way-SLI - EVGA GTX Titan X SC - EK block/plate, Custom loop, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR3-2400, Samsumg Pro 850 SSD, 2-2TB WD Black, Phanteks Primo Case, Win 10 Pro 64bit, 4K Acer XB280HK monitor, EVGA 1600 P2 Supernova PSU, Fire Strike 1.1 = 21,842  
2) EVGA X99 Classified, I7-5960X, 2- Titan X Pascal, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR4-3000, Intel NVMe PCIe 750 SSD, Win10 Pro,PSU EVGA 1200 P2 Folding 2.5M PPD    Affiliate code 05MLLDCG6B  
 
 
 

 
 
 
#75
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/04 10:12:59 (permalink)
Sushihunter
Well, well, well...  Look what I found:
 

I got this in an old system that a friend of mine gave me a while ago.
Good news: It's an exact match for the CPU I have installed.
Bad news: It is out of one of two systems I was given - one of which was hit by lightning. Don't know which one.
Good news, is that both PSU's powered up when plugged in.
Bad news, didn't have a chance to hook it up with a hard drive & monitor to test it.
Good news, this is the system the memory I added to my system came from - it's tested good.
Wish me luck!
 
The BIOS Dance® will have to wait for another night - got tied up with unexpected company tonight - haven't even had time to eat more than an orange...
 
Thanks everyone! 
 
Sushihunter
 



Good luck grasshopper 
 
Remember to use a ground strap or at least touch the case first - static electricity is not your friend when touching your PC components.
 
However it is when touching your brother
post edited by Cool GTX - 2016/08/04 10:16:00

1) ASUS Z97-WS, i7-4790K@4.9GHz,  2-Way-SLI - EVGA GTX Titan X SC - EK block/plate, Custom loop, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR3-2400, Samsumg Pro 850 SSD, 2-2TB WD Black, Phanteks Primo Case, Win 10 Pro 64bit, 4K Acer XB280HK monitor, EVGA 1600 P2 Supernova PSU, Fire Strike 1.1 = 21,842  
2) EVGA X99 Classified, I7-5960X, 2- Titan X Pascal, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR4-3000, Intel NVMe PCIe 750 SSD, Win10 Pro,PSU EVGA 1200 P2 Folding 2.5M PPD    Affiliate code 05MLLDCG6B  
 
 
 

 
 
 
#76
Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/04 18:59:48 (permalink)
Yes, I will be doing the BIOS Dance soon.
As far as swapping CPU's goes, I'll have to track down some thermal paste first.
Just remember, I have a 50/50 chance of it not being fried by lightning, so I may have to go out and buy one at the end of the month.
The other system is a PGA478 socket - so not compatible with my system.
 
I'll keep you all informed of my progress...
 
Sushihunter

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#77
Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/04 20:31:50 (permalink)
BIOS has been reset to default.
I ran the Intel CPU Diagnostic - Passed.
Will now go back and redo the BIOS to my specs...
 
Sushihunter

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#78
Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/04 22:18:22 (permalink)
From an older post...
 
Cool GTX
 
 
***** What are the GPU temps ? use GPU-z
 
Choose sensor tab
 
Go bottom left select "Log to file"
 
Tell it where to save to and Name the file.
 
Run system, do what ever crashes it most,. the file will capture the info
 
Now if your system runs for awhile file will get long, we can look at just the last few lines usually.
 
This will capture power, bus, temps - use the default settings - you can change it to log only once every 10 seconds instead of once a second, but you might miss the pre-crash info
 
I'll check back tomorrow .... after 3:30 AM on the East Coast




Running the newest version of GPU-Z
Can not find a Sensor tab.
Can not even find temperature readings on this program.
 
Also have CPU-ID running.
It shows temp. but I can't see any place to change settings for how frequently to log the data.
Am I missing something?  Did they change this feature in the newer versions?
 
Also, I'm seeing a reading for AUXTIN (under Temperatures) that is reading from 122C to 243C !
Can't imagine anything in there getting to that high a temp.
 
Otherwise, looks good.
 
Sushihunter

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#79
Cool GTX
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/06 01:30:36 (permalink)
  
Sushihunter
From an older post...
 
Cool GTX
 
 
***** What are the GPU temps ? use GPU-z
 
Choose sensor tab
 
Go bottom left select "Log to file"
 
Tell it where to save to and Name the file.
 
Run system, do what ever crashes it most,. the file will capture the info
 
Now if your system runs for awhile file will get long, we can look at just the last few lines usually.
 
This will capture power, bus, temps - use the default settings - you can change it to log only once every 10 seconds instead of once a second, but you might miss the pre-crash info
 
I'll check back tomorrow .... after 3:30 AM on the East Coast




Running the newest version of GPU-Z
Can not find a Sensor tab.
Can not even find temperature readings on this program.
 
Also have CPU-ID running.
It shows temp. but I can't see any place to change settings for how frequently to log the data.
Am I missing something?  Did they change this feature in the newer versions?
 
Also, I'm seeing a reading for AUXTIN (under Temperatures) that is reading from 122C to 243C !
Can't imagine anything in there getting to that high a temp.
 
Otherwise, looks good.
 
Sushihunter




 
Does your GPU-Z look like this ? (Newest version 1.9.0)
 
The tab next to the currently open one (Graphics Card) is the <Sensors> tab
 
Default window, when opening GPU-Z is the <Graphics Card> Tab
 
 
 
<Sensors> tab selected ---
 
 
 
 
CPUID HWMonitor
 

 
post edited by Cool GTX - 2016/08/06 02:22:40

Attached Image(s)


1) ASUS Z97-WS, i7-4790K@4.9GHz,  2-Way-SLI - EVGA GTX Titan X SC - EK block/plate, Custom loop, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR3-2400, Samsumg Pro 850 SSD, 2-2TB WD Black, Phanteks Primo Case, Win 10 Pro 64bit, 4K Acer XB280HK monitor, EVGA 1600 P2 Supernova PSU, Fire Strike 1.1 = 21,842  
2) EVGA X99 Classified, I7-5960X, 2- Titan X Pascal, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR4-3000, Intel NVMe PCIe 750 SSD, Win10 Pro,PSU EVGA 1200 P2 Folding 2.5M PPD    Affiliate code 05MLLDCG6B  
 
 
 

 
 
 
#80
Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/06 03:03:24 (permalink)
I found the problem:
 
Use the free version of these software programs
GPU-Z
http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/cpu-z.html
CPUID HWmonitor
http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
 

I ended up with CPU-Z and not GPU-Z - since corrected, now I have both.
Oddly, things were looking good - only a couple of Display Driver Crashes that didn't require a reset.
Then, before answering this, I got two BSoD lockups that required a reset.
Latest Dump File Here:  http://sabercathost.com/2gUS/080416-291971-01.dmp
and:  http://sabercathost.com/10S9/080516-51027-01.dmp
 
One other thing - it looks like my BIOS got reset back to 1101 - As I recall, it should be 1104.
I'll have to check into this a little more to see what happened.
 
Sushihunter

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#81
Vlada011
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/06 13:48:36 (permalink)
You should search for used new components as i7-2600K.i7-3770K some used Z68/Z77mobo and graphic card as GTX760/770.
GTX780 could be found for 120-150$ on Ebay.
First investment should be CPU and Mobo because Internal GPU could serve you until buy new graphic card.
 


#82
Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/07 03:04:50 (permalink)
Vlada011
You should search for used new components as i7-2600K.i7-3770K some used Z68/Z77mobo and graphic card as GTX760/770.
GTX780 could be found for 120-150$ on Ebay.
First investment should be CPU and Mobo because Internal GPU could serve you until buy new graphic card.
 




Yes, I've come to the conclusion that I'm going to have to upgrade to new MB, CPU, and RAM.
Problem is I'm on a pretty limited income, so it may take me a while to save up for what I need.
I'm hoping that the used Q6600 CPU I have will work and I can keep this system running until I can afford the new parts.
If need be, I can probably buy a used Q6600 or similar LGA 775 CPU for a pretty low figure.
 
Either way, that should give me ample time to research and save up for a good combination of parts.
At this point, I'm ball parking a rough figure of $600 - $800 for the 3 main items.
 
As for the items you listed, I'll take a look around and see what is available - depending on price, that may be a good option to keep me going.
 
Thanks for the suggestion!
 
PS: Anyone know how long Thermal Compound is good for?  I might have a tube that I got shortly after I put my system together in 2007. I bought a new CPU Cooler, but couldn't use it as the CPU I had came with a heat sync  installed from Intel and it was glued on. I'll have to rummage through the closets and see if I can locate it. I might even be able to install the mega-cooler now!
 
 

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#83
Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/07 05:02:49 (permalink)
Found the CPU Cooler - it's a Zipang unit - no model number, but works for LGA 775 and several others.
Looks like the Thermal Compound is toast. It was in a plastic bag and looks to have dried out to the point that I can't move it around in the bag.
The cooler itself is a beast! it weighs 815 grams. It's heavy enough that it probably should have some support to keep it from flexing the MB.
Also found another LGA 775 CPU - E8400 3.00GHz Core2 Duo. Faster, but only 2 cores - any port in a storm... This one, I'm pretty sure is working.
It came out of my ex's P5Q Pro system. Only problem with that one was some wires for the buttons got shorted out. I think the MB and the CPU should be in good shape, but the Antec case is toast as I do not feel like rewiring the power & reset buttons.
 

 


Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#84
Vlada011
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/07 05:30:29 (permalink)
For 600-800$ you can buy best platform at the moment.
You can buy i7-6700K-Z170 Classified-K and 16GB DDR4 for 600$.
For 800$ you can buy X99, or even cheaper version of X99 for less.
 
 
 


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Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/07 05:49:35 (permalink)
Vlada011
For 600-800$ you can buy best platform at the moment.
You can buy i7-6700K-Z170 Classified-K and 16GB DDR4 for 600$.
For 800$ you can buy X99, or even cheaper version of X99 for less.



That sounds great, but I suspect you are talking US$ - I live in Vancouver, Canada, so Can$.
Perhaps you could provide a link?
Luckily, we have some of the best prices in the country here as it is computer retail & warehouse central.
My plan is to save up until I can buy the MB, CPU and RAM in one go. That way I don't have things sitting in a closet while the technology advances.
 
I sure wish that DDR2 was still the standard for high-power systems - I just found another 4GBs of OCZ PC2 8500 Platinum DDR2...
 

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#86
Cool GTX
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/07 07:10:23 (permalink)
Sushihunter
I found the problem:
 
Use the free version of these software programs
GPU-Z
http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/cpu-z.html
CPUID HWmonitor
http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html


I ended up with CPU-Z and not GPU-Z - since corrected, now I have both.
Oddly, things were looking good - only a couple of Display Driver Crashes that didn't require a reset.
Then, before answering this, I got two BSoD lockups that required a reset.
Latest Dump File Here:  http://sabercathost.com/2gUS/080416-291971-01.dmp
and:  http://sabercathost.com/10S9/080516-51027-01.dmp
 
One other thing - it looks like my BIOS got reset back to 1101 - As I recall, it should be 1104.
I'll have to check into this a little more to see what happened.
 
Sushihunter


 
Oops,

Fixed link for GPU-Z in my OP  LINK
https://www.techpowerup.c...chpowerup-gpu-z-v1-9-0
 
Sorry for the curve ball ----my BAD
 
 
post edited by Cool GTX - 2016/08/07 07:19:06

1) ASUS Z97-WS, i7-4790K@4.9GHz,  2-Way-SLI - EVGA GTX Titan X SC - EK block/plate, Custom loop, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR3-2400, Samsumg Pro 850 SSD, 2-2TB WD Black, Phanteks Primo Case, Win 10 Pro 64bit, 4K Acer XB280HK monitor, EVGA 1600 P2 Supernova PSU, Fire Strike 1.1 = 21,842  
2) EVGA X99 Classified, I7-5960X, 2- Titan X Pascal, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR4-3000, Intel NVMe PCIe 750 SSD, Win10 Pro,PSU EVGA 1200 P2 Folding 2.5M PPD    Affiliate code 05MLLDCG6B  
 
 
 

 
 
 
#87
Cool GTX
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/07 08:44:09 (permalink)
"BIOS dance" complete ?

1) ASUS Z97-WS, i7-4790K@4.9GHz,  2-Way-SLI - EVGA GTX Titan X SC - EK block/plate, Custom loop, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR3-2400, Samsumg Pro 850 SSD, 2-2TB WD Black, Phanteks Primo Case, Win 10 Pro 64bit, 4K Acer XB280HK monitor, EVGA 1600 P2 Supernova PSU, Fire Strike 1.1 = 21,842  
2) EVGA X99 Classified, I7-5960X, 2- Titan X Pascal, 32GB GSkill Ripjaws DDR4-3000, Intel NVMe PCIe 750 SSD, Win10 Pro,PSU EVGA 1200 P2 Folding 2.5M PPD    Affiliate code 05MLLDCG6B  
 
 
 

 
 
 
#88
Sushihunter
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/07 09:30:39 (permalink)
Cool GTX
 
Oops,

Fixed link for GPU-Z in my OP  LINK
https://www.techpowerup.c...chpowerup-gpu-z-v1-9-0
 
Sorry for the curve ball ----my BAD
 -----------------------------------------------
 "BIOS dance" complete ?




Hey, no problem - I got it figured out when you posted the screen shots.
 
Oops - Got my own oops here - looks like 1101 is the newest BIOS for the P5K motherboard - don't know where I got 1104 from - unless I was thinking of 404.
 
Still getting BSoD crashes like before...
 
As soon as I can get a tube of Thermal Compound I'm going to swap in the other CPU, hopefully that will work - I've got 2 chances at finding a working CPU before I have to spend money on a new one.
 
 
post edited by Sushihunter - 2016/08/07 09:39:44

Sushihunter
Asus P5K Premium WiFi - BIOS 1101
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU 2.40 GHz* Newly Replaced
OCZ DDR2 RAM - PC2-6400 4GBs 
+ G.Skill DDR2 RAM - PC26400 4GBs Total 8GBs
EVGA Nvidia GT 620 - 2 GBs RAM Video Card
EVGA SuperNova750 Watt G2 PSU
LG BD/DVD Burner BH14NS40
LG DVD Burner GSA-H62L
Various WD & Seagate HD's - 250GB to 2TB
MediaSonic NAS Box - 4 HD's - USB 3.0
Dell 2407WFPHC Monitor + Samsung SyncMaster 750s Monitor
MS System 7 Ultimate 32-bit SP1
 ---------------------------
New (used) Build in progress:
Asus P5Q Pro
Intel Q6600 Quad CPU[/s
#89
Sajin
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Re: Help - Diagnosing Frequent Crashes BSoD - Video Card or PSU? 2016/08/07 14:51:03 (permalink)
Let us know how to cpu swap goes. 


#90
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