[SOLVED] Blue Screen of Death Issues, New Build

Jan 5, 2020
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Recently built a new computer with the following specs below

AMD Ryzen 2700x ~3.7GHz 8 Core
B450 Aorus M
GeForce RTX2070 Super
16GB Corsair Vengeance Pro 3200MHz

The only times I have received blue screens are while playing PUBG (Playerunkown's Battlegrounds). I was monitoring my temperatures and they were not high. Every time it has crashed by GPU is low 60s high 50s and my CPU is mid 40s. I have ran stress tests on both pieces of hardware and had no issues. The only changes I have made to the hardware through the BIOS was setting the RAM speed to native 3200MHz.

So far I have ran the memory diagnostic tool, disk check, SFC scan and defrag and have had no errors returned.

When the game first crashed I got an error mentioned a NET Framework update failed but got no blue screen. After that every time the game crashes it goes directly to blue screen and I don't have time to see if an error was received. See below for bugchecks in the event viewer.

The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was: 0x00000050 (0xfffff80601dd31c2, 0x0000000000000010, 0xfffff80601dd31c2, 0x0000000000000002). A dump was saved in: C:\WINDOWS\MEMORY.DMP. Report Id: 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000.

The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was: 0x0000001a (0x0000000000061948, 0x0000000020209baa, 0x0000000000000001, 0x0000000020209baa). A dump was saved in: C:\WINDOWS\MEMORY.DMP. Report Id: 7d08f740-5b39-4202-bf90-c0dd00f529af.

I have downloaded memtest86 but have not have a chance to figure out exactly how to use it or what specific tests to run.
 

Lutfij

Titan
Moderator
Don't defrag, it only reduces the life span on your HDD. If you ran defragmentation on your SSD, well, you just took an axe to it's head, since SSD's are crippled when defragmented, which is why you should disable it(or make sure it's disabled in the OS).

You should ideally list your specs like so:
CPU:
Motherboard:
Ram:
SSD/HDD:
GPU:
PSU:
Chassis:
OS:

including the age of the PSU apart from it's make and model.

Which BIOS version are you working with for that motherboard?
 
Last edited:
Solution
Jan 5, 2020
3
0
10
Don't defrag, it only reduces the life span on your HDD. If you ran defragmentation on your SSD, well, you just took an axe to it's head, since SSD's are crippled when defragmented, which is why you should disable it(or make sure it's disabled in the OS).

You should ideally list your specs like so:
CPU:
Motherboard:
Ram:
SSD/HDD:
GPU:
PSU:
Chassis:
OS:

including the age of the PSU apart from it's make and model.

Which BIOS version are you working with for that motherboard?

CPU: AMD Ryzen 2700x 3.7GHz
Motherboard: Gigabyte B450 Aorus M
Ram: 16GB Corsair Vengeance Pro 3200MHz
SSD/HDD: WD Blue 3D NAND 1TB Internal SSD M.2 2280
GPU: GeForce RTX 2070 Super
PSU: EVGA Supernova 650 G3 80+ Gold
Chassis: Corsair Crystal 280x
OS: Window-10 Home 64 Bit

In regards to the PSU, I have only had the computer put together for maybe three weeks now. Two of which I was out of town and not using it.

Thank you for the information regarding defragging, good to know for the future. The bios version is F41 (07/22/2019).

Memtest86 return 1 error Test 5 - Moving Inversion Random Patter - Error Address 0x221ABF5EC
 
Last edited:
Jan 5, 2020
3
0
10
Is this your RAM? - https://www.newegg.com/corsair-16gb-288-pin-ddr4-sdram/p/N82E16820236417
CMW16GX4M2C3200C16

If this is your RAM then it is not in the Qualified Vendors List (QVL)B450 AORUS M for the pinnacle ridge CPU.
http://download.gigabyte.us/FileList/Memory/mb_memory_b450-aorus-pro-m_pinnacle.pdf

Try returning the memory to whatever speed it was before you put it at 3200.

Nemesia, that is the exact model of the RAM I currently have. I have set it back to 2133 Mhz in the BIOS and will see if I have any issues. I can still return this memory so I may purchase one of the sets of memory you sent from the qualified vendors list.