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i only had this problem after a fail over clock but this happen today twice 

 

 

Source

Windows

 

Summary

Shut down unexpectedly

 

Date

‎10/‎31/‎2013 4:38 PM

 

Status

Not reported

 

Problem signature

Problem Event Name: BlueScreen

OS Version: 6.1.7601.2.1.0.768.3

Locale ID: 1033

 

Files that help describe the problem (some files may no longer be available)

103113-6786-01.dmp

sysdata.xml

 

Extra information about the problem

BCCode: f4

BCP1: 0000000000000003

BCP2: FFFFFA800809DB30

BCP3: FFFFFA800809DE10

BCP4: FFFFF80002F827B0

OS Version: 6_1_7601

Service Pack: 1_0

Product: 768_1

 

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As in the link in my signature, could you upload the dump files from C:\windows\minidump in a compressed archive (.zip etc) to the forum so we can figure out what happened. Also, is your computer overclocked at the moment. If so, try turning it down a bit and see if it helps.

HTTP/2 203

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As in the link in my signature, could you upload the dump files from C:\windows\minidump in a compressed archive (.zip etc) to the forum so we can figure out what happened. Also, is your computer overclocked at the moment. If so, try turning it down a bit and see if it helps.

i would but i keep getting blue screens no its not overcloacked 

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So it's crashing within a couple of minutes of getting into windows... That doesn't sound good. If possible, could you get a linux live USB and try to recover the files from that. Otherwise, all we can do is speculate on what has caused the crash. I would say if it's crashing that soon after boot, it's likely to be CPU or RAM, so if you could run a memtest on your computer it would probably be a good thing.

HTTP/2 203

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So it's crashing within a couple of minutes of getting into windows... That doesn't sound good. If possible, could you get a linux live USB and try to recover the files from that. Otherwise, all we can do is speculate on what has caused the crash. I would say if it's crashing that soon after boot, it's likely to be CPU or RAM, so if you could run a memtest on your computer it would probably be a good thing.

i don't think its my ram i notice when i put i side panel on & change my sata cable off my SSD & put another one on there it didn't  happen. i get a black screen then sometimes BSOD.

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0xF4 bug checks with a third parameter = 3 is a system critical process terminated which Windows can't continue without, that forces the box to bug check.

More often than not it's blamed on csrss.exe but that is simply because it's the one that allows user-mode in Windows.

 

0xF4 are also attributed to storage and virtual memory issues.

I will need the kernel Dump to know more -_- .

If it's storage related, be it a faulty SATA cable / port or even the storage solution itself I doubt there would be any dumps created,

but it's worth a shot.

Download Hiren's Boot CD and boot into MiniXP that will allow you to check if the dumps were created and extract them if so.

 

The folder the minidumps are located:

C:\Windows\minidump

 

The Kernel dump, a much larger file you'll need to upload it to an external hosting service (dropbox\skydrive), is a lone file in the Windows directory.

 

C:\Windows\MEMORY.dmp

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0xF4 bug checks with a third parameter = 3 is a system critical process terminated which Windows can't continue without, that forces the box to bug check.

More often than not it's blamed on csrss.exe but that is simply because it's the one that allows user-mode in Windows.

 

0xF4 are also attributed to storage and virtual memory issues.

I will need the kernel Dump to know more -_- .

If it's storage related, be it a faulty SATA cable / port or even the storage solution itself I doubt there would be any dumps created,

but it's worth a shot.

Download Hiren's Boot CD and boot into MiniXP that will allow you to check if the dumps were created and extract them if so.

 

The folder the minidumps are located:

C:\Windows\minidump

 

The Kernel dump, a much larger file you'll need to upload it to an external hosting service (dropbox\skydrive), is a lone file in the Windows directory.

 

C:\Windows\MEMORY.dmp

i think its my I5 4670K on my Z87 - A after BSOD sometimes the motherboard CPU led lights up i have having this issue before but it not lately but it could be SSD & CPU i can't use my PC now :(

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lets start with the most basic

1)is your power supply enough to power your rig? (yes, there are some cases that a crappy psu is the culprit. though its rare)

2)have you tried clearing CMOS?

3)try booting with a linux USB bootable and see if it crashes

4)have you experienced unusual beeping of you post speaker?

 

 

Not a computer PRO but have a bit of experience on PC crashes and BSOD

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lets start with the most basic

1)is your power supply enough to power your rig? (yes, there are some cases that a crappy psu is the culprit. though its rare)

2)have you tried clearing CMOS?

3)try booting with a linux USB bootable and see if it crashes

4)have you experienced unusual beeping of you post speaker?

 

 

Not a computer PRO but have a bit of experience on PC crashes and BSOD

1 no

2 yes

3 no

4 no speaker i lost it 

update crash after clearing CMOS

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1 no

2 yes

3 no

4 no speaker i lost it 

update crash after clearing CMOS

the PSU might be the problem. From experience, the mobo will shutdown(BSOD) due to unstable(noise and ripple)/insufficient power delivery

 

Though i can't be certain since I know nothing about your rig

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the PSU might be the problem. From experience, the mobo will shutdown(BSOD) due to unstable(noise and ripple)/insufficient power delivery

 

Though i can't be certain since I know nothing about your rig

dont hear any noise from my PSU which is a Corsair HX 750W 80+ GOLD i think its my SSD

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i think its my RAM

 

Remove a stick and see whether it is stable.

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no need i sent back my SSD & tried to reinstall windows on another drive & it blue screen again so it must be the RAM

It could be the CPU, motherboard, power supply or any other piece of hardware, or any driver, so don't jump to conclusions.

HTTP/2 203

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try a software it is called hd tune and see the health status of that ssd :) but when is it craching on heavy tasks or idle?

 

if you OC the system and caused system instabillity try to wipe cmos plus reboot en shutdown system again then plug the cable from your psu out and let it out for 4 minutes to take that overloaded voltage out of the MB, also try to take out the ram with it to let them drain the Voltage out. then place evrything tohether and plug that cable back again. let it in for 1 minute plus reboot system and do a system stability test with intelburntest or other tools.

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My linux setup: CPU: I7 2600K @4.5Ghz, MM: Corsair 16GB vengeance @1600Mhz, GPU: 2 Way Radeon his iceq x2 7970, MB: Asus sabertooth Z77, PSU: Corsair 750 plus Gold modular

 

My gaming setup: CPU: I7 3770K @4.7Ghz, MM: Corsair 32GB vengeance @1600Mhz, GPU: 2 Way Gigabyte RX580 8GB, MB: Asus sabertooth Z77, PSU: Corsair 860i Platinum modular

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It could be the CPU, motherboard, power supply or any other piece of hardware, or any driver, so don't jump to conclusions.

well i'll know once i get my SSD back & a new kit of RAM if it still does it i'll send back the PSU

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