Random BSOD Crashes while gameing

jacob.fuller27

Prominent
Oct 8, 2017
4
0
510
So for the past couple of weeks I've been getting random crashes while playing games. I've reseated all my components, done pretty much every kind of hardware and software test I could find but I still can't seem to figure out what is going on.

A couple of example minidumps: https://www.dropbox.com/s/elxiezisvvgj3jk/Bluescreen%20Dumps.zip?dl=0

Hardware:
Processor: Intel i6-6600 3.3GHz
Motherboard: Asus - H110M-A Micro ATX LGA1151
Ram: G.Skill - Ripjaws V Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR4-2133
Solid state drive: Samsung - 850 EVO-Series 250GB 2.5"
Hard drive: Toshiba - 2TB 3.5" 7200RPM
Video card: EVGA - GeForce GTX 1060 6GB 6GB SC
PSU: Corsair - CSM 550W 80+ Gold Certified Semi-Modular ATX
Monitor: Asus - VC239H 23.0" 1920x1080 60Hz

Event log: https://gyazo.com/fedf27713509a704058c4db5e0bee264
 

Sedivy

Estimable

jacob.fuller27

Prominent
Oct 8, 2017
4
0
510


Yeah I originally thought it might have been a temp error as well but even when I monitored the temps while I was gaming and right before the crashes I didn't see anything unusual or too high.
 

Sedivy

Estimable
Hmm. Here are the usual suspects for 41 (63)
https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/windows/en-us/308cbcb3-46ce-4f74-85f9-d87ce4cef0d6/kernel-power-event-id-41-task-category-63-spontaneous-improper-shutdowns-and-reboots?forum=w7itproperf
and so overheating, overclocking (non-issue for you), memory, psu and software related (drivers etc).

If it's happening while playing games (ie. under load), but not at all otherwise, then I'd suspect a psu first probably. If you want to check it yourself that the voltages are within tolerances: https://www.wikihow.com/Check-a-Power-Supply (scroll to part 2). Or else take it into repair shop for them to check this for you.
Also graphics drivers. If the game is for whatever reason not liking your current graphics drivers, it can BSOD. Is this with only one game or any game? Are your graphics drivers up to date? Get them from manufacturer's site.

Otherwise if you want to try stress testing components yourself, for cpu you'd use Prime95, for memory, Memtest (use 8 passes at least) and for gpu Furmark. However if it's the psu, all 3 of those can be affected so I'd still check the psu first.
 

jacob.fuller27

Prominent
Oct 8, 2017
4
0
510


Yeah, I already tried completely uninstalling my graphics driver and redownloading it from NVIDIA's site. It's with every game I play, even not particularly intensive ones so I am just really puzzled by all this. I haven't tried stress testing my GPU, so I'll see how that goes.
 

Sedivy

Estimable
Without testing voltages on psu, there isn't really a way to notice anything about psu output. If you can't test it yourself, take it into a shop so they can test it for you.
When you say re-tested cpu, gpu, what did you use? Were there crashes?
Have you checked the other link I posted? Have you tried updating all your drivers? Turning off antivirus you might be running? Disabling everything on startup you don't need with msconfig?