My PC is acting wierd!

k0RNyx

Reputable
Dec 9, 2015
15
0
4,510
Hi guys i really need help..

I bought a new graphic card and ssd like maybe a year ago and till now was all doing fine, now im getting some random freezes and blue screens and i think my CPU i acting wierd too. :/

When i got the blue screen today i tryed to take all out of the Motherboard and put it all back again and for now is doing fine but im not sure if its over...

Here is a ss from my CPU cores... im not a specialist but with just a google chrome opened its a bit wierd ... BTW sry for my bad english

SS: http://pokit.org/get/?ae1052eb84e888d383ea80350e26be5f.jpg
 
Solution
It looks like the SS you have shows CPU usage, not temperature. Is that correct? If just usage then 100% on one core isn't terrible and shouldn't cause a BSOD unless you're overheating.

To see what's causing the CPU load, you can use Task Manager to sort processes by CPU load. Chrome is known for being a memory and CPU hog. If you have a bunch of add-ons, it could cause additional CPU load, but CPU load by itself, except for heat related issues, shouldn't cause BSOD.

There are several things that could cause BSOD including a bad motherboard, RAM, video card, power supply, hard drive or SSD... you need to eliminate those by testing each component first, then all at once to use as much power as possible which would test the PSU...

leo2kp

Distinguished
It looks like the SS you have shows CPU usage, not temperature. Is that correct? If just usage then 100% on one core isn't terrible and shouldn't cause a BSOD unless you're overheating.

To see what's causing the CPU load, you can use Task Manager to sort processes by CPU load. Chrome is known for being a memory and CPU hog. If you have a bunch of add-ons, it could cause additional CPU load, but CPU load by itself, except for heat related issues, shouldn't cause BSOD.

There are several things that could cause BSOD including a bad motherboard, RAM, video card, power supply, hard drive or SSD... you need to eliminate those by testing each component first, then all at once to use as much power as possible which would test the PSU.

Try doing some research on "stress testing" CPU, RAM, and graphics, and perform surface-scans of your HDD or check the SMART status of your SSD. Common software includes 3DMark (graphics), Prime95 (CPU), MemTest86+ (RAM), CoreTemp (CPU temp for when you're testing CPU), HDTune (HDD surface scan, SMART status). Those are just some examples, there are others out there.
 
Solution

k0RNyx

Reputable
Dec 9, 2015
15
0
4,510
I resolved a problem seems like my RAM port had a broken thing that hold him in possition and probably a RAM didnt have a good contact ... soo guys the problem is solved :D ...ty anyway