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shadowstar1000

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  • Gender
    Not Telling

System

  • CPU
    AMD Phenom II X4 965
  • Motherboard
    ASUS M4A88T-V
  • RAM
    8 GB DDR3
  • GPU
    GTX 970 STRIX
  • Case
    Cooler Master HAF 3
  • Storage
    1TB HDD 120GB SSD
  • PSU
    Corsair RM650
  • Display(s)
    2X Gateway KX2153
  • Cooling
    Stock
  • Keyboard
    Razer Blackwidow 2014
  • Mouse
    MadCatz RAT R3
  • Sound
    Logitech G430
  • Operating System
    Windows 7

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  1. I'm going to try taking out all the HDDs and seeing if it still has issues, I was still having the same error with the Corsair MP510 as my boot drive and the HDDs are the only components that I haven't tried removing yet. I'll post an update next time I have a crash, I really appreciate all your help
  2. Thanks again for the reply, crystal disk info is here https://pastebin.com/sRXWcAgz The page file appears to be on my C drive, this is the new 2TB Samsung 990Pro.
  3. Thanks for taking the time to reply, the minidumps are attached below. Minidump.zip
  4. Thanks for taking the time to reply, I really appreciate it! This is a pretty good idea, but unfortunately isn't the issue. I've had this issue pop up at both my apartment and my parents house so it's not likely dirty wall power. I also have a roommate who's computer works fine. I don't use a UPS but I do use a surge protector. I'll post all the components and specs of the two machines. My peripherals are: Razor Huntsman, G703, Dell S2718D, LG 27GL850, Razer Blackshark Original Specs: R7 3800X 32GB TridentZ 3600Mhz CL16 RTX 3080ti FE ASUS Prime X570 Pro 1TB Corsair MP510 3TB Seagate Barracuda st3000dm008-2dm166 1TB Seagate HDD 1TB WD Black WDC WD1003FZEX-00K3CA0 250GB Samsung 860 Evo Corsair RM750X New Specs: R9 7900X3D 32GB Tridentz 6400Mhz CL32 RTX 3080ti FE ASUS Prime x670E-Pro Wifi 2TB Samsung 990 Pro 3TB Seagate Barracuda st3000dm008-2dm166 2x 12TB Seagate Ironwolf running in RAID 1 1TB WD Black WDC WD1003FZEX-00K3CA0 Corsair RM1000x Reused components: 3TB Seagate Barracuda 1TB WD Black RTX 3080ti It shouldn't be the GPU, I pulled it and had the same crashes while running on integrated graphics.
  5. I need some serious expert support because I've tried everything I can reasonably think of. I've been dealing with daily BSODs for the last 6 months. The BSOD changes each time but is often memory related such as IRQL NOT LESS OR EQUAL or PAGE_FAULT_IN_NONPAGED_AREA, there's a bunch of different ones. Most of these errors appear to be memory related but nothing seems to fix it. I ran memtest64 for 8 hours with no errors detected, I underclocked my memory down to 2133mhz. I did a clean install of windows, no luck. I tried switching the dims in the MOBO, I tried using a different pair of memory sticks. I caved and ended buying a new CPU, MOBO and RAM but had no luck, the issue still persists. I figured it was a failing SSD, crystal disk info reported 90% health but I tried a brand new Evo990 Pro, still BSODs within 24 hours on a clean install of windows. I ran MalwareBytes in case there was a virus on one of my HDDs but came up clean. At this point the only remaining components are a few HDDs that hold games and my home media library, my GPU, and PSU. I switched PSUs to a 1000Watt corsair from a 750Watt and am still having the issue. I pulled the GPU and ran the system on dedicated graphics and still ran into the issue. I am honestly completely lost, aside from the old HDDs I've replaced every component in the system. Any ideas?
  6. I've been having a BSOD on my system about 4-7 times a week. I'll occasionally go a few days without one but end up with one again. The stop code varies and a lot of the time I'm not actually at my computer when it occurs. I use this system for gaming and as an always on Plex server. It's common for the BSOD to occur when Plex is playing videos, but it doesn't happen exclusively when Plex is actively streaming, so I'm not sure that it's related. The security and maintenance logs report a hardware error and often times a reboot following a bug check. Example bugcheck report: The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was: 0x0000003b (0x00000000c0000005, 0xfffff8052ba203c7, 0xffff858687098cb0, 0x0000000000000000). A dump was saved in: C:\WINDOWS\MEMORY.DMP. Report Id: 883cc030-d187-4e02-86c1-20a29fe94719. Example HW error report: Source Windows Summary Hardware error Date ‎12/‎17/‎2022 6:05 AM Status Not reported Description A problem with your hardware caused Windows to stop working correctly. Problem signature Problem Event Name: LiveKernelEvent Code: 144 Parameter 1: 3003 Parameter 2: fffffc80141006b0 Parameter 3: 40010000 Parameter 4: 0 OS version: 10_0_19045 Service Pack: 0_0 Product: 768_1 OS Version: 10.0.19045.2.0.0.768.101 Locale ID: 1033 After googling the code and parameter 1 it seems like this is a USB issue, but I have no idea how to go about fixing it. Any ideas? Windows 10 10.0.19045 Build 19045 x64-bit Original OS Windows 10 Retail Hardware varies a lot by age, oldest HDD is about 9 years old, but my boot SSD is about 3 years old. Newest component is my GPU, about 1.5 years old. CPU: Ryzen 7 3700X GPU: RTX 3080ti RAM: 32GB Trident Z DDR4 3200Mhz (XMP is currently disabled) Mobo: ASUS PRIME x570 Pro PSU: Corsair RM750x SSDs: Corsair MP510 (boot drive), Samsung 750 Evo HDDs: 1 Seagate 1TB, 1 WD Blue 1TB, 1 Seagate 3TB Custom built desktop
  7. So recently a friend of mine reached out because she was worried about an ex hacking into her Whatsapp account using her IMEI number to read all her messages. Now I personally don't think this is possible, and looking it up makes it seem like maybe it was a thing back in 2012, but there's little to no information about it now. Does anyone know if this is possible? If it is how does it work and what can you do to protect against it? This seems like a massive security weakness that would need to get patched very quickly if it is the case.
  8. 2070 will be a bit faster, I'd go with that one.
  9. I'd just do the single drive, will also be much more reliable than raid 0.
  10. https://www.newegg.com/p/N82E16817104954 Just a quick Google search turns up this bad boy, def not something I want to be pushing the envelope with. If it is something newer or nicer that might change my verdict doe.
  11. Other things you can try are a BIOS update just to see if that might be causing an issues.
  12. Likely a bad HDD or memory issue. Can you post the error codes? If you want to you can try swapping around the memory sticks to see if you can find out if one is bad. Other than that I'd be looking at the HDD. Try to run a SMART test if you can on it.
  13. Check if you can see when the mobo was actually manufactured. You might need a BIOS update for it to support the 9900 since it's a 9th gen chip. If that's the case you should be able to tell by looking at the first 4 digits of the serial number to tell when it was built. If it needs a BIOS update you'll need to find an 8th gen chip to use (some PC repair shops may be willing to do it for you for around 40 dollars). If the BIOS is up to date enough for the 9th gen chip try moving the RAM around in case you have a bad stick or port.
  14. I'd say upgrade the PSU. While 450 watts is enough for your build, I don't really trust that that PSU will be able to handle it nicely. The model is from 2005 and looks pretty sketch. Spend $70 on something decent from EVGA or Corsair with around 500 to 600 watts and you'll be fine.
  15. I'm not familiar with that specific piece of software, but there should be a test you can run called SMART, it'll tell you if it detects any issues with the HDD. A little bit of sound is to be expected from a HDD (remember, it has very fast moving parts). If you're worried I'd throw anything super important on Google Drive asap until you can either figure out if its a healthy drive or get a new drive in there.
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