1.

Solve : Blue Screen While Performing CPU Intensive Tasks.?

Answer»

Hey everyone! Lately, I've been having a persisting problem with my computer. I edit films and whenever I'm in the rendering stages, or even just idle in Adobe Premiere my computer crashes. I get a blue screen error with either the message WHEA_UNCORRECTABLE_ERROR or CLOCK_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT. I'm not sure if it's an overheating issue or not because my computer has fairly decent cooling, but it only happens when I do something CPU Intensive, it quite obnoxious. Here are some specifications from my computer if it helps!

Tech Support Guy System Info Utility version 1.0.0.4
OS Version: Microsoft Windows 10 Home, 64 bit
Processor: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-4790K CPU 4.00GHz, Intel64 Family 6 Model 60 Stepping 3
Processor Count: 8
RAM: 16335 Mb
Graphics Card: NVIDIA GEFORCE GTX 1080, -1 Mb
Hard Drives: C: 118 GB (9 GB Free); D: 931 GB (146 GB Free); E: 904 GB (98 GB Free);
Motherboard: ASRock, Z97 Anniversary
Antivirus: Windows Defender, Enabled and Updated
Hi, unfortunate turn of events for you.

You likely have a driver issue, when did you update your drivers last?
Where did you get the ones that you updated with?I updated my drivers about a month ago, and I got some drivers from the ASROCK websitehas the processor been overclocked?
have a temperature monitoring program, say Speccy, running in the system tray to tell you the temps right before the next BSOD happens. Quote from: watsthegod on December 15, 2017, 07:33:27 PM

I updated my drivers about a month ago, and I got some drivers from the ASROCK website

What is the make of your GPU?  Is it Asus, EVGA, Gigabyte, MSI.....?

Also your drives are pretty close to capacity Windows don't like that... Quote from: Quantos on December 15, 2017, 07:50:32 PM
What is the make of your GPU?  Is it Asus, EVGA, Gigabyte, MSI.....?

<edit> Also your drives are pretty close to capacity </edit>

My GPU is made by Nvidia, and I got it around a year ago.
http://speccy.piriform.com/results/iaHcOm1PHxeJKY2i5ovgnW6
I also ran speccy if it can be of any help at all. Quote from: Mark. on December 15, 2017, 07:48:18 PM
has the processor been overclocked?
have a temperature monitoring program, say Speccy, running in the system tray to tell you the temps right before the next BSOD happens.
I'm not too sure on how to DETERMINE if it's been overclocked or not sadly, but I did run speccy if its any help.
http://speccy.piriform.com/results/iaHcOm1PHxeJKY2i5ovgnW6If you'd OC'd it you would know.  Speccy was a waste of time

You have CPU timing issues between the cores and the threads, that's likely a driver issue

Read my last post and answer any questions therein

  And your drives are still dangerously full 

Quote from: watsthegod on December 17, 2017, 03:13:34 AM
My GPU is made by Nvidia, and I got it around a year ago.

No, it's not made by nVidia, they make the chipsets nothing more
I bet you have the wrong GPU driver, amongst other drivers Quote from: Quantos on December 17, 2017, 08:43:36 PM
No, it's not made by nVidia, they make the chipsets nothing more
I bet you have the wrong GPU driver, amongst other drivers

Hey Quantos, I double checked and my card is INDEED by Nvidia. It's a NVIDIA Geforce GTX 1080, I also ran some stress tests if that can be of any use.


Discussion

No Comment Found