There are 5 stop errors on my blue screen

KADIZZLE1127

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Sep 24, 2014
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I rebuilt my computer after it was having trouble turning on and figuring that out was a big ordeal but after that I got the grub error. I made it so I could boot up with a windows disk and after I figured that out I got a blue screen with 5 errors. I tried safe mode, safe mode with networking, starting with the configuration that worked last, and I tried disabling automatic reboot after system failure. Nothing worked
It says. I use Windows 7 Incase anyone needs to know

*** STOP: 0x0000007E (0xFFFFFFFFC0000005, 0xFFFFF8000D2B2881,0xFFFFF88003D2B968,0xFFFFF88003D2B1c0)

Thank you
 

KADIZZLE1127

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Sep 24, 2014
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Here you go

PSU-Corsair CX 430W 80+ Bronze Certified Semi-modular ATX Power supply 

Motherboard - GIGABYTE GA-B250M-DS3H LGA1151 Intel Micro ATX DDR4 Motherboard

GPU - Nvidia GTX 980

RAM - 2 sticks Patriot Signature Line 4GB DDR4 DRAM Module 2400 MHz (PC4-19200) PSD44G240081
1 stick Crucial 4GB Single DDR4 2400 MT/s (PC4-19200) SR x8 DIMM 288-Pin Memory - CT4G4DFS824A

HDD- Toshiba 500GB 3.5" 7200RPM

CPU - Intel core 15 7500k lga 1151
 

KADIZZLE1127

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Sep 24, 2014
23
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4,510


Yeah that makes sense. I put the ram in a different slot and it works now. So I guess it’s the slot that’s messed up

 
*** STOP: 0x0000007E (0xFFFFFFFFC0000005, 0xFFFFF8000D2B2881,0xFFFFF88003D2B968,0xFFFFF88003D2B1c0)

this is the error code :(0xFFFFFFFFC0000005 it means a bad memory address was used.
all of the memory address start with 0xffff so they look like valid kernel memory addresses but
they could have bad bits. I can not tell without looking at the memory dump.

without anything else to go on, I would remove any overclocking drivers in windows and run memtest86 to confirm the memory timings. (generally you update the bios before your run your memtest, to get the best default memory timings)