A different BSOD every time:(

Emre Z

Honorable
Oct 19, 2013
2
0
10,510
Hello,

I have a big problem with my pc and i can't find any other solution than throwing it away and start saving for a new one...
I'm getting Blue Screens every time i turn my computer on. All with different error codes. I have searched for all of them one by one but it feels like it is creating new errors every day...

I tried installing different windows 7's and 8 but didn't do any good. (yes they weren't genuine copies because all i wanted to see is if a new install would solve the problem). I also replaced my mainboard with the exactly same new one, replaced my cpu with a lower model, replaced hard disks, even my power supply. I only didn't replace my rams and gpu. I have 4x 2gb rams and i tried every one of them seperately one by one to see if one of them is defected, but seems to keep on seeing blue screens... I removed my gpu and worked with onboard gpu but it wasn't a solution either..Disconnected all the usb ports on the case... I keep getting blue screens as if i were doomed or someone is making a joke.

It all started with a sudden black screen i think it was because of overheating while i was playing a fps game. It was hot summer night and i was silly to remove one of the case fans to get rid of the noise... Anyways, after that incident till this day, every piece has been replaced. So it should have been already solved.

Do you have any idea what would the cause be? Should i throw it away?


My config:
Asus M4A88TD-M EVO USB3
AMD Phenom2 4x black edition
Kingston DDR3 4x 2 gigs
Geforce 9800gt


Thank you for your help.
 

jbseven

Distinguished
Dec 2, 2011
646
0
19,160
Try ONE stick of RAM and test if the error occurs in each of the slots. If so, try the next sticks untill you test all of the ram this way.

If it is not the ram, try updating the video card drivers from nvidia.com. If the problem persists, try removing the card from your motherboard and test with onboard graphics, making sure you have the latest drivers for that too.

Also try installing HWMonitor to see the temps when the BSOD's occure.

Report back with your results.
 

Emre Z

Honorable
Oct 19, 2013
2
0
10,510


I accidently wrote my reply to the gray text area and submitted.. where did it go?

I did all those tests in the past but the result didn't change. :(
And i dont think it's a heating issue because i installed a tx3 with 2 fans running at full speed.

Shall i install linux and see if it is really a hardware issue?