Win7 Bsod

Discussion in 'Software' started by spirittoo, Mar 21, 2019.

  1. spirittoo

    spirittoo Sergeant

    I am having problems with my Ryzen rig crashing. I'm not sure what is going on. It started when I was trying to get a pcie usb card installed and later when trying to get a hub to work. The last couple of times I was running my flight sim program. I see the errors in the even viewer, but I don't know what it means. Can anyone give me an idea what to look for?o_O
     
  2. risk_reversal

    risk_reversal MajorGeek

    I presume that you completely uninstalled the driver to the USB3.0 add-on card?
     
  3. spirittoo

    spirittoo Sergeant

    Yes ... I went into the control panel to remove it. I have the new card, but I want to get this clear up before I move forward.
     
  4. spirittoo

    spirittoo Sergeant

    Okay ... I downloaded ccleaner and ran it for the registry, windows and apps. I also ran windows 7 manager and had it clean the registry also. I used the repair options ... repair all system components ... file association ... the errors I saw in the event views showed some kind of error involving the WMI (Windows Management Instrumentation) so I had windows manager rebuild it. So far the system hasn't crashed ... hopefully what I did corrected the problem. Time will tell. If all goes well I will try and install the new pcie usb card.
     
  5. risk_reversal

    risk_reversal MajorGeek

    That would have been my second suggestion

    Why don't you make an image of your boot partition prior to hw or sw install that way if the proverbial hits the fan you can just restore it and no harm done....

    Good luck with the other add-on USB3.0 card
     
  6. spirittoo

    spirittoo Sergeant

    Wellsir ... no crashing after having the computer running for several hours. I installed the pcie 3.0 card and it worked :D All is well.
     
  7. spirittoo

    spirittoo Sergeant

    Gosh darn it I'm getting BSOD again ... I tested the ram one stick at a time ... it passed and I tested the hard drive ... it passed. I get a "Page_fault_in_nonpaged_area" on the BSOD. I looked it up but it was not very clear on how to stop it. What can I do to correct this? http://www.motherboards.org/forums/images/smilies/icon_frown.gif
    Also it seems to take a while to boot up. I have a much slower computer that can boot up faster. Plus the notification sounds are several seconds after the box pops up. Don't know what is up with that. o_O
     
  8. sexyandy81

    sexyandy81 MajorGeek

    The BCCode 50 usually occurs after the installation of faulty hardware or in the event of failure of installed
    hardware (usually related to defective RAM, be it main memory, L2 RAM cache, or video RAM).

    Another common cause is the installation of a faulty system service.

    Antivirus software can also trigger this error, as can a corrupted NTFS volume.

    Resolving the Problem
    Resolving a faulty hardware problem: If hardware has been added to the system recently, remove it to see
    if the error recurs. If existing hardware has failed, remove or replace the faulty component. You should run
    hardware diagnostics supplied by the system manufacturer. For details on these procedures, see the owner's
    manual for your computer.

    Resolving a faulty system service problem: Disable the service and confirm that this resolves the error. If so,
    contact the manufacturer of the system service about a possible update. If the error occurs during system
    startup, restart your computer, and press F8 at the character-mode menu that displays the operating system
    choices. At the resulting Windows Advanced Options menu, choose theLast Known Good Configuration
    option. This option is most effective when only one driver or service is added at a time.

    Resolving an antivirus software problem: Disable the program and confirm that this resolves the error. If it
    does, contact the manufacturer of the program about a possible update.

    Resolving a corrupted NTFS volume problem: Run Chkdsk /f /r to detect and repair disk errors. You must
    restart the system before the disk scan begins on a system partition. If the hard disk is SCSI, check for
    problems between the SCSI controller and the disk.

    Finally, check the System Log in Event Viewer for additional error messages that might help pinpoint the
    device or driver that is causing the error. Disabling memory caching of the BIOS might also resolve it.
     
  9. Eldon

    Eldon Major Geek Extraordinaire

  10. spirittoo

    spirittoo Sergeant

    Okay ... there you go ...
     

    Attached Files:

  11. Eldon

    Eldon Major Geek Extraordinaire

    Some files were repaired.
    Restart the PC to repair those files that are in use.
     
  12. spirittoo

    spirittoo Sergeant

    Nope ... still crashing ... it was crashing so much I just shut it down. I think this is some kind of driver(s) issue. Comodo was slowing the computer way down so I uninstalled it. Maybe its driver was causing a problem. I updated my chipset. I went to the mobo site and downloaded the latest drivers. There were some windows hotfixes included with the file so I installed them too. I didn't uninstall the old drivers, it looked like the program saw them and updated them. There may be a problem with my TP-Link wifi adapter driver causing it to crash. I'm going to try a pci card to see it that will help.
    https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=9SIAJ7W8HJ6217
     
  13. spirittoo

    spirittoo Sergeant

    Wellsir ... I finally got this BSOD problem solved. It was definitely the third party drivers. First for some reason Comodo and this new processor and mobo didn't get along. Its drivers were causing a problem, so I had to uninstall it completely with a AV removal tool. I install AVG to replace it. Next, the USB wifi adapter drivers were causing the machine to crash. I could not find a updated driver for it, so I had to replace it, with a PCI card. Next the chipset drivers were causing problems so I had to uninstall them. I went to the manufacture's site and got the latest chipset drivers and I found there were hotfixes that had to be installed too. After all that the computer still crashed. Turned out it was the driver for the PCIe USB 3.0 hub card I installed. I had to go the the manufacture's site and get the latest driver for it. Now the machine is stable again ... so far. Finding someone to read the dumpfiles was key in finding out what drivers were causing the problem. I had to run the windows driver verifier to find which drivers.
    Hope this helps someone else.:cool:
     
  14. satrow

    satrow Major Geek Extraordinaire

    Here?
     
  15. spirittoo

    spirittoo Sergeant

  16. risk_reversal

    risk_reversal MajorGeek

    Thanks for the info.

    Must admit, I have never had much luck with USB add-on cards as they have always caused me issues which I why I always use powered usb hubs.

    Pleased you sorted it out
     

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