Frequent BSOD, "disappearing" system drive?

May 6, 2018
2
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Good day,

I recently got a new computer into which I re-seated my existing two SATA HDDs and reinstalled Windows 7 on my dedicated system drive.

There was never a problem with neither the disk nor with Windows in the old PC, however now my system frequently crashes with bugcheck 7a (KERNEL_DATA_INPAGE_ERROR), referencing 0xc00000c0 (STATUS_DEVICE_DOES_NOT_EXIST) or 0xc000000e (STATUS_NO_SUCH_DEVICE) in parameter two.

Other times the screen goes black, followed by aero UI crashing first, then explorer.exe disappearing, the system hanging, and finally crashing with BSOD bugcheck f4 (CRITICAL_OBJECT_TERMINATION) referencing address ntoskrnl.exe+80640. While this unfolds I managed to catch all data turning Unknown about the disk in HD sentinel, and SMART benchmark being no longer available, strongly suggesting the hard drive has crashed.

Following reboot the system boots correctly, but the same crash occours each time within 5-30 minutes.

CHKDSK /F /R has been performed on the drive, which has reported no issues.

EDIT: The disk is running constantly at 49-50 °C while in use (installing Windows updates). Is that normal?

SMART report of the disk:
http://www.hddstatus.com/hdrepshowreport.php?ReportCode=11235885&ReportVerification=E0EFF637

The hard disk is partitioned in two, first half NTFS for Windows and second half EXT4 for Linux. No crash has occoured under Linux, however.

Is there a chance to fix this, or do I have to reinstall Windows on a different HDD?
 
Solution
try to reinstall or update chipset drivers of mobo in windows, or update drivers for your hdd in device manager.

what about temperature in linux?
is it like in windows?

if you are working long in linux, can you run programs you didn't run from startup?
because even if you pull out the harddrive while linux is booted, it won't crash, but it won't load anything, that is not in ram.

if it does that thing, buy a new harddrive

Filip_35

Commendable
Aug 2, 2017
60
0
1,660
try to reinstall or update chipset drivers of mobo in windows, or update drivers for your hdd in device manager.

what about temperature in linux?
is it like in windows?

if you are working long in linux, can you run programs you didn't run from startup?
because even if you pull out the harddrive while linux is booted, it won't crash, but it won't load anything, that is not in ram.

if it does that thing, buy a new harddrive
 
Solution