KERNEL_DATA_INPAGE ERROR Issue.

FranticFicus

Honorable
Sep 23, 2015
8
1
10,515
So as the title reads, I've been having some problems with BSODing b/c of a KERNEL_DATA_INPAGE ERROR. Been happening since the 12th. Decided to roll back to the 12th, just before an update was installed. The fact that I'm here now means that didn't work. However, I have repeatedly checked for hardware issues/faults/malfunctions. Said checks have always come up clean, no problems. So what do I have to do to fix this rather infuriating issue? It's not preventing me from using the computer, I'm on it right now. Usually I can be on it for hours on end without incident. In fact I've gone days without one. I'm really stumped here. It's a pretty new Computer. 3 1/2 month old. Running an Intel Core i7-4790K CPU @4.00GHZ with a GeForce GTX 960. 8.00GB of Ram (plenty left) on windows 7. Motherboard is MSI Z97S SLI KRAIT edition. I DO have an SSD as well as a 2 terabyte HDD. I'm pretty sure I was overclocked as well, I say was b/c upon restart after one of the first BSOD's it gave me the message that essentially means the overclock was reset. Any Help is appreciated. Thanks. Oh, it also seems completley random. has occured when gaming/browsing/IDLE/whevenver the crap it wants.
 
Solution
It can be difficult to diagnose the cause(s) of the BSOD's. It may be due to a combination of hardware and software issues, or just one source.

First, suggest clearing CMOS to reset BIOS and any overclocking settings. And ensure the memory and video card are seated properly. Doing this may help and/or even solve the crash issues!

Could try the procedure here to find/eliminate source(s) of system crashes.

For step 1 in the procedure, be aware that registry cleaners are not infallible. They may miss some entries (which may or may not be the cause of crashes), and/or they may delete required system entries, which in turn may make the situation worse. It is suggested that this step be skipped, unless the registry cleaner...
It can be difficult to diagnose the cause(s) of the BSOD's. It may be due to a combination of hardware and software issues, or just one source.

First, suggest clearing CMOS to reset BIOS and any overclocking settings. And ensure the memory and video card are seated properly. Doing this may help and/or even solve the crash issues!

Could try the procedure here to find/eliminate source(s) of system crashes.

For step 1 in the procedure, be aware that registry cleaners are not infallible. They may miss some entries (which may or may not be the cause of crashes), and/or they may delete required system entries, which in turn may make the situation worse. It is suggested that this step be skipped, unless the registry cleaner allows user selectable options of which entries to delete AND it is known for certain that entries for deletion are not essential (for system files).

For Step 2 in the procedure, as ONE anti-malware scanner is unlikely to detect ALL known malware, then recommend using (ONE at a time):

Emsisoft Anti-Malware (as recommended at the website)
Malwarebytes Anti-Malware
SUPERAntiSpyware
AdwCleaner

 
Solution