Having major issues with the computer I built, hope someone can help.

Craig1214

New Member
Hello, I am new here and I was hoping someone would be able to help me with this issue I have been having with a computer I built.

About 5 or 6 years ago, one of my good friends helped me build a custom computer when I was not very familiar with hardware. Everything was fine and worked great for about the duration of that time (5 or 6 years). Out of the blue, my hard drive burned up and stopped working. I figured, what the hell, it's been 5 or 6 years why not upgrade a few other things. (I didn't care much that I lost stuff on my hard drive because I deleted my partitions and re-installed windows every once in a while anyways. I don't keep stuff on there so I won't lose anything important.) I bought a new motherboard, CPU, hard drive (obviously), as well as a new case since my old one was beat to hell.

Everything was fine, until about 2 months after I revamped the computer. All of a sudden Windows Explorer started crashing out of no where and when I'd reset the computer, it'd run a hard drive test to address and repair the issues. It deleted a bunch of corrupt files and everything was running smooth for about another week. Same thing started happening, except this time it wouldn't get past "Windows is starting...". I figured it was a virus and deleted my partition, then tried to re-install windows again but had no luck. In the end, I took a shot in the dark and guessed it was just a faulty hard drive.

Today, (a month or so after replacing the previous hard drive which I had for a total of 2-3 months) it started doing it again on a brand new hard drive on a legit, store bought version of Windows Ultimate 64-bit. Windows Explorer kept crashing and eventually I just reset the computer and went through the hard drive repair again. I don't understand what is going on. Anyone ever address an issue like this?

Here are my specs:
Motherboard: ASUS P8Z68-V Gen3
Gfx Card: nVidia Geforce GTX 570
CPU: Intel Core i3-2120 @ 3.30ghz
RAM: (Forgot the specific name of it. However, if you need this I will look inside, but I am too lazy right now.) 16gigs
Hard Drive: WD (model#: WDBAAZ0010HNC-NRSN)
PSU: (Forgot the name of this too, same goes for this if you need the name.) Either a 750 or 850, can't remember right now.

I also do have a cooling system for the CPU and a CD/DVDRW drive installed if you need either of those.

Anything else, let me know. Thank you for reading this, and I hope you can help!
 
Hello, I am new here and I was hoping someone would be able to help me with this issue I have been having with a computer I built.

About 5 or 6 years ago, one of my good friends helped me build a custom computer when I was not very familiar with hardware. Everything was fine and worked great for about the duration of that time (5 or 6 years). Out of the blue, my hard drive burned up and stopped working. I figured, what the hell, it's been 5 or 6 years why not upgrade a few other things. (I didn't care much that I lost stuff on my hard drive because I deleted my partitions and re-installed windows every once in a while anyways. I don't keep stuff on there so I won't lose anything important.) I bought a new motherboard, CPU, hard drive (obviously), as well as a new case since my old one was beat to hell.

Everything was fine, until about 2 months after I revamped the computer. All of a sudden Windows Explorer started crashing out of no where and when I'd reset the computer, it'd run a hard drive test to address and repair the issues. It deleted a bunch of corrupt files and everything was running smooth for about another week. Same thing started happening, except this time it wouldn't get past "Windows is starting...". I figured it was a virus and deleted my partition, then tried to re-install windows again but had no luck. In the end, I took a shot in the dark and guessed it was just a faulty hard drive.

Today, (a month or so after replacing the previous hard drive which I had for a total of 2-3 months) it started doing it again on a brand new hard drive on a legit, store bought version of Windows Ultimate 64-bit. Windows Explorer kept crashing and eventually I just reset the computer and went through the hard drive repair again. I don't understand what is going on. Anyone ever address an issue like this?

Here are my specs:
Motherboard: ASUS P8Z68-V Gen3
Gfx Card: nVidia Geforce GTX 570
CPU: Intel Core i3-2120 @ 3.30ghz
RAM: (Forgot the specific name of it. However, if you need this I will look inside, but I am too lazy right now.) 16gigs
Hard Drive: WD (model#: WDBAAZ0010HNC-NRSN)
PSU: (Forgot the name of this too, same goes for this if you need the name.) Either a 750 or 850, can't remember right now.

I also do have a cooling system for the CPU and a CD/DVDRW drive installed if you need either of those.

Anything else, let me know. Thank you for reading this, and I hope you can help!

Hi, and welcome.

It seems, that you are unlucky, as it seems you have a bad sector, or many of them. I would perhaps refrain from buying Western Digital drives. They are not as good as they used to be, and I had similar problems with my drives. Those occur even more often in the higher capacity WD drives. RMA back, or exchange in the shop for a Seagate or Samsung drive. Hope this helps a bit.
 
Download SIW.exe, which stands for System Information Windows, and is a diagnostic tool.

Have a look at the SENSORS and TEMPERATURES.

The Temperature of your CPU should be no more than 50c (Preferably around 39c)
If above this check for dust in CPU and graphic card fan.

Fan speeds should be around 3000-4000rpm, if lower then you will need to either lubricate the CPU fan or replace it.

Hard drive Temperature should be no more the 45c, if above this check for AIR space around the drives

Power units.The correct power unit should be within 0.2v.

If any of your readings are above these levels you need to correct them as soon a s possible.
Terry
 
What is the exact make and model of power supply you have? Do you live in an area that get power outages/surges or brownouts? Check your bios to see if it gives you voltage outputs of your power supply, most do.
 
Back
Top