BSOD after closing Rainbow Six Siege

BravoRed5

Commendable
Jun 19, 2016
26
0
1,530
So I was shutting down Rainbow Six Siege, and then I noticed that it took longer than expected to shut down. The screen was black and then some weird distorted pixels appeared at the top left of the screen. The monitor then turn itself off then on but only black then off repeatedly. After that I got a BSOD.

Source: Kernel-Power
Event ID: 41
Task Category: (63)

This is the EventData:

EventData

BugcheckCode 278
BugcheckParameter1 0xffffdb0fd2b49240
BugcheckParameter2 0xfffff80633dbf3dc
BugcheckParameter3 0x0
BugcheckParameter4 0xd
SleepInProgress 0
PowerButtonTimestamp 0
BootAppStatus 0
Checkpoint 0
ConnectedStandbyInProgress false
SystemSleepTransitionsToOn 3
CsEntryScenarioInstanceId 0

System Specs:

Windows 10
CPU: i5-6600k
Cooler: CM Hyper D92
MOBO: MSI Z170A PC Mate
RAM: 2x4 | 8GB Corsair Vengeance LPX 2666mhz
GPU: MSI AMD R9 380 4G
PSU: Corsair CS650M
Storage: WD 1TB
Samsung 850 EVO SSD




 
Solution
Just going by that article and the Event ID you are getting. You could use CPUID Hardware Monitor http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html to check that voltage is around what it should be. The problem is it could be normal until it crashes and I don't know if Hardware Monitor keeps a running log of min and max values so that when you crash and restart you can check for an unusual drop or spike.

BravoRed5

Commendable
Jun 19, 2016
26
0
1,530


The only overclock that I've ever used is the MSI Gaming App. It's basically factory overclock.
EDIT: before I got this BSOD, the monitor rarely went black for a couple of seconds and back on again, it doesnt matter when im gaming or when im just browsing. I don't know about the GPU though, games runs fine on it no artifacts, ran furmark and there's no artifacts
 

BravoRed5

Commendable
Jun 19, 2016
26
0
1,530


you sure it's the psu? some people say it's audio or video driver, but idk though
 

u2desire420

Commendable
May 17, 2016
200
2
1,760
Just going by that article and the Event ID you are getting. You could use CPUID Hardware Monitor http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html to check that voltage is around what it should be. The problem is it could be normal until it crashes and I don't know if Hardware Monitor keeps a running log of min and max values so that when you crash and restart you can check for an unusual drop or spike.
 
Solution