My system crashes a lot

TridenBoy

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Dec 26, 2013
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10,510
First of all, my config:
Asus M4A785TD-V EVO
AMD Phenom II 965 BE
2x8GB (Corsair Vengeance) ---- Now using 1x2GB
GTX 760
Cooler Master 650w (RS-650-PCAR-E3)
2x 1TB Samsgung HD103SI
1x 1TB ST1000DM003 (Barracuda Seagate) (Main)

Since January, my system's been crashing a lot, with BSOD, random freezes that requires forced restarts, random restarts (the screen just goes black and the PC restarts).

So far, I was told it was a memory problem (so I changed the ones I had with the Corsair ones), but the problem persisted. Then, my dad's friend told me it was my main HD and Graphic Card that were "broken", I changed them, but the problem persisted.

When my PC came back (It was unused for almost 6/7 months, while I gathered money to buy a new Graphics Card), it still had problems. So I tried running memtest on my memories, and both sticks got errors (Didn't get the test to run until the end, I don't actually understand the error's meaning), so changed to one that came with my friend's HP desktop (But still, the problem persists). And also I've tried disconnecting my

The BSOD messages I get are:
kernel_security_check_failed (The most common by far)
memory_management (1 time)
system_service_exception(win32k.sys) (1 time)
video_memory_management_internal (1 time)

I get those crashes at random times, from an idle system to running a game. And by the way, the air that's coming from the PC

Any help would be greatly appreciated :)

PS: I've some questions that concern me:
1) Could it be a problem with the place my computer is at? (Because already two people claimed they couldn't reproduce the problem)
2) Could it be a motherboard or CPU problem?
 
Solution
if you copy your memory dump to a cloud service like sky drive, people can connect a windows debugger and see
what caused the failure. Sometimes you can use a program like whocrashed.exe and it might also give a hint as to the cause.

most likely a memory corruption problem: These are very often caused by device drivers that overwrite into other programs memory space.
(mostly poorly written device drivers or sometimes a poorly written virus), They can also be caused by overclocking, incorrect memory timing settings in your BIOS. Sometimes these also are cause by thermal cracks in traces on the electronics.

Best to start looking with what you can fix the easiest and that would be looking at the memory dump with whocrashed.exe or a...
Hello... any time a DATA/Hardware device loses communication with Windows you could get a BSOD... verfiy your Electrical Data connections cables in your computer, Look at PIN and Socket connectors, the Molex type connector, Can have pins push out the back of them.
Try removing your CD/DVD and other non essential cards/drives to determine if they could be causing a DATA/HARDWARE communication loss.
32 bit/64? Windows?
Check your House wiring at the OUTLET for a loose wire... try a different Power cable to your computer Power Supply.
 

Nikolay Savov

Distinguished
Hi
If you change the place of the PC and if the problem is gone then :
- you have bad power outlet grounging
- you have any other device that is not proper connected to you PC - TV , Home Cinema SYstem , Speakers , Console etc. .......
If you fail with RAM stick and the same sticks are 100% ok in different System Tested then regarding above information it could be you motherboard ......
take one by one testing ....
- disconnect all but CPU , GPU and 1 Stick RAM
- change the place change the power outlet
- find a friend with compatible PC to test you RAM , CPU , GPU
- test different PSU also .........
 
if you copy your memory dump to a cloud service like sky drive, people can connect a windows debugger and see
what caused the failure. Sometimes you can use a program like whocrashed.exe and it might also give a hint as to the cause.

most likely a memory corruption problem: These are very often caused by device drivers that overwrite into other programs memory space.
(mostly poorly written device drivers or sometimes a poorly written virus), They can also be caused by overclocking, incorrect memory timing settings in your BIOS. Sometimes these also are cause by thermal cracks in traces on the electronics.

Best to start looking with what you can fix the easiest and that would be looking at the memory dump with whocrashed.exe or a debugger.

post your memory dump on skydrive and give the public access, and I will try to take a quick look at it.
 
Solution

TridenBoy

Honorable
Dec 26, 2013
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10,510


Since this is the most fast to test, I will try your suggestion first (But thanks for all replies, as soon as I'm able, I will try them out)

I know you told to upload on skydrive, but since I'm already logged in my google account, did on google docs :)

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1CuWGchn-DTBLCHUf1wpbvykWvReGOTZfv8l8G5ijp2Q/edit?usp=sharing

Thanks for the support
 

I only see a description of the dumps not the actual memory dump file it should be in system root \memory.dmp
by default. it should be about 250mb in size

 

TridenBoy

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Dec 26, 2013
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10,510


Oops, sorry, there it is:

http://www.mediafire.com/download/yyb739sudd7vh8a/MEMORY.DMP
 

TridenBoy

Honorable
Dec 26, 2013
4
0
10,510


Sorry, those two last crashes were a test, I thought that whocrashed would generate reports automatically...

The ones with "rspCrash64.sys" are the test ones
 
no problem, let me know when you have a memory dump that has your issue in it.
notes:
asus M4A785TD-V EVO
BaseBoardVersion = Rev X.0x bios date 7/23/2010 version 2105

nvlddmkm.sys Mon Nov 11 05:24:05 2013