Ram or ssd causing BSOD

Kronus101

Reputable
Aug 2, 2015
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4,510
So I've recently finished my new pc build,

Specs: MSI 970 Gaming mobo, AMD FX-6300 Cpu, Corsair Vengence pro 16GB(2x8) 1600mhz, Corsair force ls SSD, Sapphire R9-270 Vapor X.

So when i ran my mobo with my old ram and hdd and didn't give me any problems but when I got my new ram/ssd it started randomly blue screening, it doesnt create any memory dumps doesnt save any blue screen logs either. I've tried to recreate the bsod with burn in test and couldn't. It has randomly given me a memory I/O error, have done the windows memory diagnostic and passed, tried memtest and passed ran victoria on my ssd and passed tried a few other disk checkers which passed.

I'm stuck in the mud don't know how to replecate or fix this, any help would be apreciated.

If you need any other specs or info let me know.

EDIT: after it blue screens it wont boot up into windows/doesnt detect ssd, i have to power off and power on before it boots normally.

Here are some images on win7
BSOD: http://i.imgur.com/SQxU7Ye.jpg http://i.imgur.com/znFEH13.jpg

BurnInTest with differing results: http://i.imgur.com/OIe6bGw.jpg http://i.imgur.com/biPnCkP.jpg

Logs: http://i.imgur.com/4Di71Xp.jpg http://i.imgur.com/OiHq4m5.jpg http://i.imgur.com/O7ZbCiH.jpg

Memory I/O errors: http://i.imgur.com/TfGXeVe.jpg http://i.imgur.com/TmRuoWG.jpg

After bsod restart: http://i.imgur.com/DVPYnZH.jpg

Win10: http://i.imgur.com/qHqMKjf.jpg (I left my pc to dump overnight and was on 0% in the morning)

Thanx in advance.
 
reset your BIOS to defaults or better yet update the BIOS to pick up better default RAM timings.
then boot into BIOS and leave your system powered on in the BIOS screen for a few hours.
(this allows the SSD to do disk clean up functions after it is idle for 5 mins)

windows 7 is not very SSD aware, and the ssd firmware can get behind on the disk management.
after you boot windows, run crystaldiskinfo.exe and read the smart data to check the drive for errors, you can also read the firmware version and then look for firmware updates.

Also, depending on your motherboard SATA ports, often people put the drive on the fastest SATA port but often these are a externel sata chipset that has bugs in the device driver. You should try and put your SSD on the primary sata port (the slower one directly supported by the CPU chipset)
then look to see if there is a driver update for the 3rd party SATA chipset. Note, generally windows updates will update the primary sata chipset but not the secondary one. (got to the motherboard vendor for updates)