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Solve : Constant driver fault in AMD 5000 series-atikmpag.sys? |
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Answer» Tried posting this in computer hardware. Guess with it being a driver issue it seemed suited better here. On a side note, ive used the program FurMark before to benchmark my video card and it rarely crashed the drivers surprisingly. It was only when I went to do 'burn in' tests that it auto crashed.That is an item of interest. You GPU is a Radeon 5870 - Right? Do you have another video card? One that will work in your machine. Even a card with less performance. Try another video card, with the right drivers, and see what happens. The objective is to make sure it really is the driver and GPU is really the key issue and not something else. Like maybe some buggy games. Or a glitch on the motherboard. This is relevant, but don;t assume it is the right answer. http://www.sevenforums.com/graphic-cards/152798-ati-hd-5870-driver-problem.html I think that n another GPU and proper drives will make it n100% certain that it is really the GPU and drivers.But make sure before you spend a lot of time trying to diagnosis the GPU drivers.The guy on this forum is having the same problem: http://www.techsupportforum.com/forums/f299/solved-bsod-with-atikmpag-sys-522149.html#post2942180 And it says [fixed] in the title Well I stripped the drivers, cleaned with CCleaner then used DriverSweeper to delete all remaining traces. I reinstalled CCC and driver combo and haven't seen any adverse effects so far. Been playing Assassin's Creed 2 for hours at a time with ZERO error. Keep the thread open for a day or so more. Will post again if something comes up. On a side note, AMD should include all of these processes in their driver installations. They should remove, delete traces and install the new driver. Makes it a hassle to do it every time I get a new set of drivers. Anyhow, thats that for now. Thanks againSorry to revive the thread but it CONTAINS the same information Im about to get back into. Im still having problems with my driver crashing. Itll even crash in Windows outside of a game too. Was just surfing the web and my screen halted and nothing MOVED (although sound still did play). A few seconds later the screen went black and came back up with an error bubble in my system tray saying that the driver failed and recovered. Any thoughts on where to begin?Near 100% of the driver issues with Windows 7 64 bit is the drivers are just not right from the start. They don't 'wear out' like tires on your car. Any and all programs that call directly e into the drivers must also be true 64 bit. Even when the go for hours, they can cause an error later on. You need to get a video card that has proven drivers for Windows 7 64 bit. It it is stable with the another card, you have the answer. Did you already LOOK this over? Understanding hardware and software for 64-bit Windows This would imply the problem is not rare at all.You said that you installed new drivers right? And it still didnt work. I think the problem is with the graphics card hardware itself. Graphics cards seem to be the most failing hardware now adays. Often it is because of inadaquate cooling. MSI after burner is good for looking at graphics card temperature even with non MSI graphics. You could use that to check ur temps. If it's not cooling problem, then you will most likely need a new card.I'm with Linux711 on this one. It really sounds like a failing or overheating card. I'd start with checking the fan is working, and even take the card out, checking the fan and making sure the heatsink on the card isn't clogged with dust and that the slot and contacts of clear and clean. Then put the card back in and try again. |
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