Bluescreen Problem

swchoi89

New Member
Hi,

I downloaded the BlueScreenView. How do I work this thing?

And sometimes... it just freezes with random lines across the screen,, then reboots my computer.... :S
 
Last edited:
Download BlueScreenView
No installation required.
Unzip downloaded file and double click on BlueScreenView.exe file to run the program.
When scanning is done, go Edit>Select All.
Go File>Save Selected Items, and save the report as BSOD.txt.
Open BSOD.txt in Notepad, copy all content, and paste it into your next reply.
 
Download BlueScreenView
No installation required.
Unzip downloaded file and double click on BlueScreenView.exe file to run the program.
When scanning is done, go Edit>Select All.
Go File>Save Selected Items, and save the report as BSOD.txt.
Open BSOD.txt in Notepad, copy all content, and paste it into your next reply.

When I run the BlueScreenView.exe, there is nothing in the list?

Also, I just experienced a bluescreen. My temps are fine I think (69C for CPU and 55~60C for my GPU when I'm playing Starcraft 2)

Nvm, I found the Dump file, it was in Windows, but the default folder was looking at Minidump :P Hang on a second
 
==================================================
Dump File : MEMORY.DMP
Crash Time : 06/09/2013 9:17:48 PM
Bug Check String :
Bug Check Code : 0x00000124
Parameter 1 : 00000000`00000000
Parameter 2 : fffffa80`0c019028
Parameter 3 : 00000000`bf800000
Parameter 4 : 00000000`00000124
Caused By Driver :
Caused By Address :
File Description :
Product Name :
Company :
File Version :
Processor : x64
Crash Address :
Stack Address 1 :
Stack Address 2 :
Stack Address 3 :
Computer Name :
Full Path : C:\Windows\MEMORY.DMP
Processors Count : 4
Major Version : 15
Minor Version : 7601
Dump File Size : 683,567,409
Dump File Time : 06/09/2013 9:18:19 PM
==================================================
 
69 is really kind of high. code 124 represents a hardware issue.

Is there a c:\windows\minidump folder? The output you gave me wasn't really complete.
 
69 is really kind of high. code 124 represents a hardware issue.

Is there a c:\windows\minidump folder? The output you gave me wasn't really complete.

Yes, that folder exists but there is nothing in there.

This is the only dmp file I could fine.

I thought 69 is acceptable under load?? And it is overclocked with 212+ CM Hyper Evo
 
Remove the overclock and see if the bluescreens stop. Your overclock probably isn't stable.
 
Remove the overclock and see if the bluescreens stop. Your overclock probably isn't stable.

You might be right. I underclocked to 4.1Ghz right now, and I didn't crash at all.

Voltage is at 1.2V.. but it was at 1.155V before when I OC'd to 4.4Ghz. Would it be because my voltage is too low?
 
Yes, but not all chips are the same in terms of overclocking. To be honest, your system really doesn't need OC at all. I would also be suspect of that PSU even though it looks reasonable, when you start overclocking, it can problems can arise.
 
4.1GHz is a respectable overclock. If your CPU can't go any higher, leave it. As said above, each chip overclocks differently so you cannot guarantee you'll be able to get what others have achieved.

I know some people with 2500Ks who have got their chips past 4.5GHz, but I started having stability problems around 4.5GHz so I left it at 4.3GHz.
 
Try bumping up the Vcore to 1.26 and using any spread-spectrum settings and other oc voltage modifications in the BIOS.
 
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