Blue Screen Of Death

fadi232

Distinguished
Oct 30, 2013
28
0
18,530
Hi Community,

I've been receiving a blue screen for a while now, this might be the 4th time. I was wondering what's the reason, and if there is anything I can do?

My System:
Gigabyte H61M-S2-B3
Intel Core i3 2120 @3.3GHz
8GB (4 Kingston+4 Ceon) 1333 DDR3 9CL
Hitachi HDS721010DLE630 ATA Device
SAPPHIRE DUAL-X R9 270X 2GB GDDR5 OC WITH BOOST
+Sound Card+Network Card
SeaSonic SSP-650RT active PFC F3

Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit

Graphic card more info:
Radeon Software Version - 17.6.1
Radeon Software Edition - Crimson ReLive
Graphics Chipset - AMD Radeon R9 200 Series
Memory Size - 2048 MB
Memory Type - GDDR5
Core Clock - 1070 MHz

Blue Screen:
b033ddca97e1a8c03b80478bc808b9d4.jpg


Thanks


 
Solution
update the motherboard audio driver and turn off any audio sources that do not have a speaker attached to them. (in control panel device manager)
-------------
gpu took two long to respond to a request. atikmpag.sys driver date was 5936f70 which is
Tue Jun 6 11:43:12 2017

I think the time out is 2 seconds by default.

make sure you have installed the current motherboard sound driver. a old sound driver can mess up the gpu sound support for displayport or hdmi. This can cause the driver to get errors and not respond correctly.

sometimes if you have overclocking drivers installed the hardware might not be timed correctly and miss a signal which can cause a driver to wait forever for the signal. you might reset the bios to...
update the motherboard audio driver and turn off any audio sources that do not have a speaker attached to them. (in control panel device manager)
-------------
gpu took two long to respond to a request. atikmpag.sys driver date was 5936f70 which is
Tue Jun 6 11:43:12 2017

I think the time out is 2 seconds by default.

make sure you have installed the current motherboard sound driver. a old sound driver can mess up the gpu sound support for displayport or hdmi. This can cause the driver to get errors and not respond correctly.

sometimes if you have overclocking drivers installed the hardware might not be timed correctly and miss a signal which can cause a driver to wait forever for the signal. you might reset the bios to defaults so it will rescan your hardware and rebuild the database of settings it sends to windows. You might make sure you don't have any overclocking drivers installed for the GPU or cpu. you might try to set your GPU to the stock clock rates for the reference model of the GPU.

you should also run crystaldiskinfo and read the smart data from your drive. you can get this error if the drive is taking too long to load some file.
 
Solution
Hi,

Actually, I do have an usb sound card that doesn't have any speaker most of the time!
I'll try to disconnect it, and also update the sound driver, and see how it goes.
Thank you a lot johnbl 😉