Lots of BSoD and Lock Ups

rondor1818

Honorable
Jan 23, 2014
6
0
10,510
I'm really at a loss here guys.. I've had, what I thought minor driver issues regarding SLI for the past few months to now, to a full blown BSOD machine, that BSs anytime I try to do anything. I'm really at a loss. I've tested each card, ran memtest for 12 hrs, used 4 or 5 different sets on Nvidia drivers (with and without SLI), etc and every time i think i have iosolated or fixed the problem, something else pops up.

Its been a few days and I thought I cleared everything up. So I started to do a little bit over clocking. Even when I did a mild over clocking I would get BSODs. I am beyond frustrated. All I want is a machine that runs. And at this point, I can't really do much of anything.

Here are links to a few minidumps I've collected:
http://www.filedropper.com/052814-7675-01
http://www.filedropper.com/052914-7456-01
http://www.filedropper.com/060314-7051-01
http://www.filedropper.com/060314-7160-01

The first few dumps I got from Blue Screen Viewer all appeared to be related to graphic drivers and now I'm getting BSOD from all over it seems.

Here is also the CBS Log file that I got after I ran a sfc/sannow. Not sure if that helps but It may..
http://www.filedropper.com/cbs_1

Any and all help would be much appreciated.. Thanks.

Specs:
AMD 8350
ASUS Sabertooth 990FX R2.0
Corsair Vengeance 4 X 4GB 1600 MHz
Gigabyte GTX 770 4GB
WD 2 TB Black
WD 1 TB Green
Crucial 480GB SSD
EVGA 1000w G2 PSU
 
sorry about my last post but when I see sabertooth it leaves a bad taste in my mouth...

So I started to do a little bit over clocking. .well your kind,a on your own with this
also read the footnotes of the driver you want to install about the windows uninstall issue.
but if you get your card back to out of the box stock try these steps and where I say new card just remove your card from the slot and reseat it ....

start computer as normal-- got to add/remove programs--- uninstall all your old cards drivers and add on programs for the card--- shut down and then reboot back to desktop normally [ i dont like to do safemode here cause it my hide an issue ] and it should be running on the windows default driver to check-- go to device manager-display- right click your card [it may just say generic vga ] - property's - driver - and see that driver provider is microsoft- if so shut down and turn off psu switch unplug it wait a min or so push the power button like you normally do to start the computer to see if its discharged-- [if the computer comes on for like a second or two and dies it now discharged] then remove your old card and install the new card as proper install instructions show for your new card-- when you got everything in order and installed correctly [monitor and all] put power back to the psu turn on switch start up computer normally and let it boot to desktop and it should be running on windows default drivers if it looks good with no issues install your new cards drivers and reboot as prompted. and hopefully all will be good to go. i like to download the driver from nvidia/amd to a file on the desktop and install it from there
 

rondor1818

Honorable
Jan 23, 2014
6
0
10,510
i've done every sort of combo of cards and drivers imaginable. i got a lot more bsod with the one card than the other so i'm rma'ing it in the mean time. the one i'm using now, i don't get them quite as frequently but they still happen from time to time. i'm not sure if this is shotty drivers via nvidia or if both the cards or mobo are just garbage. i was debating on rma'ing the board as well, but asus is rather sluggish with their rma's so i don't want to be out of a pc for possibly weeks.
 
ok--- no need to explain to me about asus cause I know the main thing about them for me is never again-- high on hype, low on quality my last good board from them was a 939 board
if you rma the board they will more than likely just send it back with a boo hoo note or someone else's board in the hopes it works out for you.

well anyway good luck