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Hi my Pc keeps crashing and I just bought the parts and it will frequently crash at random intervals and bluescreen and restart my temps for my cpu and gpu seem relatively okay at 22ish celcius for the cpu. Please if someone could help me figure it out It would be very much appreciated 

 

As for parts

I decide to get the msi monster hunter combo with the motherboard the aio and the case the other parts i got are as follows I got a intel I7 12700kf and a gigabyte 4060 eagle oc I also have 32 gb of corsair vengeance ram for storage I have a samsung evo 970 nvme and for power I have a seasonic 750w from 2021 

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Go to C:\Windows\Minidump and check if you have any minidump files. If you do, go back to the Windows folder and copy the Minidump folder itself to the Downloads folder (You can use the desktop if you don't have OneDrive syncing files). Zip the copied folder and attach it to a post. Please follow the instructions to the letter as Windows doesn't like you messing with files in this location.

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On 3/18/2025 at 5:38 AM, Bjoolz said:

Go to C:\Windows\Minidump and check if you have any minidump files. If you do, go back to the Windows folder and copy the Minidump folder itself to the Downloads folder (You can use the desktop if you don't have OneDrive syncing files). Zip the copied folder and attach it to a post. Please follow the instructions to the letter as Windows doesn't like you messing with files in this location.

here I have copied it to this zip file

Minidump.zip

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4 minutes ago, duckdodger said:

here I have copied it to this zip file

Minidump.zip 801.34 kB · 0 downloads

An NMI is being sent to the CPU and after that the CPU orders a BSOD. NMI is non-maskable interrupt which is a type of interrupt where the CPU has to drop everything it's doing and handle it immediately. It's reserved for more serious stuff, mostly hardware errors. We can't see what sent the NMI or why.

 

It's almost certainly going to be a hardware issue. 90% of the time it's the CPU itself, but it could also be the motherboard or a PCIe device. About the only thing it can't be is RAM because only ECC RAM can send NMIs. 

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5 minutes ago, Bjoolz said:

An NMI is being sent to the CPU and after that the CPU orders a BSOD. NMI is non-maskable interrupt which is a type of interrupt where the CPU has to drop everything it's doing and handle it immediately. It's reserved for more serious stuff, mostly hardware errors. We can't see what sent the NMI or why.

 

It's almost certainly going to be a hardware issue. 90% of the time it's the CPU itself, but it could also be the motherboard or a PCIe device. About the only thing it can't be is RAM because only ECC RAM can send NMIs. 

Thank you alot for checking Is there any way for me to test any of those things to try to narrow it down in anyway? I have tried switching out my NVME for another one and it seems to still crash

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1 hour ago, duckdodger said:

Thank you alot for checking Is there any way for me to test any of those things to try to narrow it down in anyway? I have tried switching out my NVME for another one and it seems to still crash

Not really, you replace things and see if it stops crashing. So if you have a repair shop that can do that for you, that would be optimal. Unless you got a spare CPU and motherboard lying around. 

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