Hello my system crashes randomly with BSOD,this is what I get,the error code changes all the time after windows crashes.I would also like to know whats my onboard sound driver???I have Asus P4S800D-X motherboard with intel 3.0ghz cpu and Windows Xp Pro with SP2 installed.
The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was: 0x1000007e (0xc0000005, 0x00000000, 0xf78e6c58, 0xf78e6954).
please help me out to fix this problem,it just crashes and gives me blue screen.
When I check South Bridge SIS 964 Properties Using Evererst Home Edition this is what i see:
AC'97 Audio Controller: (Doesn't Say Realtek or anything)
Audio Controller Type : (SiS 7012)
When I go to Control Panel/System/Device Manager and check sound section I see it as SoundMax Intergrated Digital Audio.
Please help me out to fix this problem its pissing me off.
What RAM do you have installed? Try booting the system with one DIMM only in slot 1. Try the other DIMM as a single if the first one fails. Run memtest86 and test for errors on each DIMM.
I had the same problem with the built in audio card on my asus mobo causing BSODS while gaming or even using photoshop. When deactivating it in the bios all the crashes vanished.
In my case it was the graphics card and sound card sharing the same irq.
Deactivating the floppy that was on by default in BIOS and installing the latest drivers from realtek's site helped me resolve this issues. Might do the same for you.
Your sound card is an
ADI AD1888 SoundMAX 6-channel CODEC
S/PDIF out interface
http://www.asus.com/products.aspx? [...] l3=45&l4=0 download ubcd boot from ubcd look for cpu/memory this will also test windows cache memory, usually this error is driver/directx, poorly configured video code/sound drivers, diskkeeper can help you out with fragments and PFT's.
Delete C:\WINDOWS\Prefetch (just files, select all, delete! Leaving prefetch folder) 1 time every once and a while. Uninstall every device driver including any usb devices not needed. Don't let windows install any drivers upon restart. Play with the system for a bit by searching for files not removed by the uninstall process, (deleted those files). Now is the time to use (diskkeeper) Start off by increasing your PFT 300mb or more and, perform a PFT/pagefile defragment/filesystem ( This is going to take awhile but well worth the wait.) When windows finally boots install all the system drivers again. Choosing the correct driver. IN the light of this, sometimes just changing the irq of the sound card is all that is needed.
NOTE: (always disable system restore service when performing disk intensive maintenance)
Message edited by gomerpile on 01-09-2008 at 08:38:25 PM
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WAITING FOR THE NEXT MOMENT TO STRIKE