Question Random BSOD over multiple weeks.

Aug 31, 2022
2
0
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Good Afternoon,

Back in Jan I had some BSOD problems that were resolved by updating the BIOS. Since the 18th of this month though i've had periodic BSOD that I just can not seem to narrow down.

At first it seemed to be gaming related as it would occur when i had two different games up - so reinstalled GPU driver
Computer would randomly reboot without a dump or a BSOD - replaced power supply.
Lots of BSOD that some said could be memory issue - ran mem test for 2 days

Next thing i may do is try replacing motherboard and then memory and then GPU if that still doesn't resolve the issue. I hate to throw money at the problem because this system is around 2 years old, but this is what I work on, do school work on, and spend free time on. That said the GPU was used when i bought it (couldn't find a 3000 series for resonable so got a used 2070 Super).

Dumps
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/15544xAF5ACh0P7tapGS3704MFxPvXSXI?usp=sharing

OS Name Microsoft Windows 10 Education
Version 10.0.19044 Build 19044
Other OS Description Not Available
OS Manufacturer Microsoft Corporation
System Manufacturer Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd.
System Model X570 AORUS ELITE
System Type x64-based PC
System SKU Default string
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 3700X 8-Core Processor, 3600 Mhz, 8 Core(s), 16 Logical Processor(s)
BIOS Version/Date American Megatrends International, LLC. F37d, 7/27/2022
SMBIOS Version 3.3
Embedded Controller Version 255.255
BIOS Mode UEFI
BaseBoard Manufacturer Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd.
BaseBoard Product X570 AORUS ELITE
BaseBoard Version x.x
Platform Role Desktop
Secure Boot State Off
PCR7 Configuration Elevation Required to View
Windows Directory C:\Windows
System Directory C:\Windows\system32
Boot Device \Device\HarddiskVolume5
Locale United States
Hardware Abstraction Layer Version = "10.0.19041.1806"
Time Zone Central Daylight Time
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 64.0 GB
Total Physical Memory 63.9 GB
Available Physical Memory 52.9 GB
Total Virtual Memory 73.4 GB
Available Virtual Memory 58.3 GB
Page File Space 9.50 GB
Page File C:\pagefile.sys
Kernel DMA Protection Off
Virtualization-based security Not enabled
Device Encryption Support Elevation Required to View
Hyper-V - VM Monitor Mode Extensions Yes
Hyper-V - Second Level Address Translation Extensions Yes
Hyper-V - Virtualization Enabled in Firmware No
Hyper-V - Data Execution Protection Yes


Any help anyone could give would be very appreciated.
 
I've been running Stellaris and Wow lately but its happened when playing BF5 as well.


- <Event xmlns=" ">


- <System>


<Provider Name="Microsoft-Windows-WER-SystemErrorReporting" Guid="{ABCE23E7-DE45-4366-8631-84FA6C525952}" EventSourceName="BugCheck" />


<EventID Qualifiers="16384">1001</EventID>


<Version>0</Version>


<Level>2</Level>


<Task>0</Task>


<Opcode>0</Opcode>


<Keywords>0x80000000000000</Keywords>


<TimeCreated SystemTime="2022-08-31T16:47:59.1293723Z" />


<EventRecordID>17044</EventRecordID>


<Correlation />


<Execution ProcessID="0" ThreadID="0" />


<Channel>System</Channel>


<Computer>DESKTOP-37UJVQD</Computer>


<Security />


</System>


- <EventData>


<Data Name="param1">0x0000003b (0x00000000c0000005, 0xfffff805279f8b72, 0xffff9280f78fe920, 0x0000000000000000)</Data>


<Data Name="param2">C:\Windows\MEMORY.DMP</Data>


<Data Name="param3">828205ce-79d4-4092-9cd8-2c540dc2e1a4</Data>


</EventData>


</Event>

- <Event xmlns=" ">


- <System>


<Provider Name="Microsoft-Windows-WER-SystemErrorReporting" Guid="{ABCE23E7-DE45-4366-8631-84FA6C525952}" EventSourceName="BugCheck" />


<EventID Qualifiers="16384">1001</EventID>


<Version>0</Version>


<Level>2</Level>


<Task>0</Task>


<Opcode>0</Opcode>


<Keywords>0x80000000000000</Keywords>


<TimeCreated SystemTime="2022-08-30T03:16:50.8130194Z" />


<EventRecordID>16623</EventRecordID>


<Correlation />


<Execution ProcessID="0" ThreadID="0" />


<Channel>System</Channel>


<Computer>DESKTOP-37UJVQD</Computer>


<Security />


</System>


- <EventData>


<Data Name="param1">0x000000c1 (0xffffa10d3c68cfe0, 0xffffa10d3c68c4c7, 0x0000000000610020, 0x0000000000000023)</Data>


<Data Name="param2">C:\Windows\MEMORY.DMP</Data>


<Data Name="param3">8e3f57d5-2a28-4424-aabe-46ffbaf27f8d</Data>


</EventData>


</Event>
 
I know this sounds sorta dumb, maybe idk I'm not really that knowledgeable on BIOS and all the other things.

Anyways, I had the same issue like a year ago. I had like 3~ish BSODs every month. turned out my CMOS battery was going bad. Basically just check if it's your CMOS battery going bad:

  1. The laptop has difficult booting up.
  2. There's a constant beeping noise from the motherboard.
  3. The date and time have reset.
  4. Peripherals aren't responsive or they don't respond correctly.
  5. Hardware drivers have disappeared.
  6. You can't connect to the internet.
  7. (which isn't there but) Random BSODs
https://www.hp.com/us-en/shop/tech-takes/what-is-cmos-battery-how-to-remove-and-replace