blue screen error

ArielGazit

Reputable
Sep 30, 2015
10
0
4,510
so recently i bought a new pc. its all good but sometimes i started getting blue screens and the error "kernel_data_inpage_error" and whan im rebooting it reset my boot order back to my 1tb hdd insted of my ssd. its very annoying to set it back to normal agian.
my system:
intel core i3 4170 3.7ghz not overcloacked
asus b85m-g
Gskill value 8gb ddr3 1600ghz not oc
sapphire r7 370 2gb 985mhz
wd caviar blue 1tb storage drive sata 3 6gb
corsair force ls 60gb boot drive sata 3 6gb
500w psu
*my amd drivers are updated
*the first bsod happend after 1200 mhz oc for gpu that last 30 min and the gpu ran full load at 60c . after 10 min my screen turned black and little bit after i had the crash.
*the 2nd bsod was while i was playing tf2 on max setting, 1600*900 res and 120 (capped) fps solid.
why is this crash happening? is there a way to fix it? also sometime my screen turns black for 2 sec without anything heppeing after

thanks in advance.:)
 
Solution
Unstable voltage is unstable voltage, whether your GPU is at 40% load or 100% load.

While I can not grantee that the PSU is 100% for sure the source of your blue screens, it is an unstable variable that makes it near impossible to troubleshoot anything else until that unstable variable is removed.
yes i do.
i dont change the volts but the clock speed, also the crash happend 10 min after the 30 min stable overclock while furmark was on and the gpu was only at 60c
*also its a built in psu
 
NEVER go cheap on the part that can destroy the other parts.

The PSUs that come as combo's with computer cases are complete junk and are not designed for the demand of gaming. They are designed to meet a budget and to put a sticker with a big number on it to sound impressive.

These PSUs typically lack any sort of safety features to prevent them from frying all of your components (or even causing a house fire), and have no ability to provide clean stable voltages for even factory clocked devices let alone an overclock.

Thus, you guessed it, my first recommendation is to ditch that PSU asap.
One of the best cost effective PSUs right now is the Seasonic s12ii.
Don't get the Corsair CX/CXM psus, or a EVGA B1/G1/W1 series PSU as those are on sale for a reason, and that is their lower build quality.
If you have to buy something cheaper then the Seasonic above, then the cheapest good PSU I can recommend is an Antec VP450; it is nothing fancy by any stretch but has good build quality).
 
Unstable voltage is unstable voltage, whether your GPU is at 40% load or 100% load.

While I can not grantee that the PSU is 100% for sure the source of your blue screens, it is an unstable variable that makes it near impossible to troubleshoot anything else until that unstable variable is removed.
 
Solution