|
Answer» I have been getting BSOD's for the past month.
Sometimes they strike every few days, sometimes twice in a day. It is intermittent and whilst the PC is still usable, it can get very annoying.
I have done a Memtest which indicated nothing and I tried a complete reset of Windows 10 and the problem persisted.
The fact that it continued after a Windows 10 reset update indicates that it must be a hardware related issue.
I did notice that the internal WIFI card USED to often go off when the BSOD struck and sometimes did not launch again after the re-start. When this happened, the PC would have a second BSOD shortly after but the issue would be resolved after re-starting before another BSOD struck a few hours later.
I bought a USB wifi adapter and disabled my internal WIFI adapter, thinking that that will solve the issue. It did stop for three days but happened again today.
What is likely to be the issue? Is there anyway that I can determine it?
The PC is a HP BS1XX i3. It has a GENERIC battery in and does have some hardware damage. The SD port and USB port on the left hand side do not work.
The following is a report of the past three BSOD's.
Are the Error messages all the same cause or random ? ? If random i immediately suspect the generic battery as random errors usuallly point to flakey power.According to what I've seen, the messages are always different
Quote from: patio on January 18, 2021, 09:26:59 AM Are the Error messages all the same cause or random ? ? If random i immediately suspect the generic battery as random errors usuallly point to flakey power.
I found this in Event Viewer. Download BlueScreenView: http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/blue_screen_view.html unzip downloaded file and double click on BlueScreenView.exe to run the program. when scanning is done, go to EDIT - Select All Go to FILE - SAVE Selected Items, and save the report as BSOD.txt Open BSOD.txt in Notepad, copy all of the content, and paste it into your next replyIt's the PSU...
And dump that generic battery....they are junk.I have not had a single BSOD in the last six days. I have been using the PC straight of mains. The thing is that the battery still was lasting more than an hour which is why I did not suspect it to be the issue. It is...
Quote from: Allan on January 23, 2021, 09:25:42 AMDownload BlueScreenView: http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/blue_screen_view.html unzip downloaded file and double click on BlueScreenView.exe to run the program. when scanning is done, go to EDIT - Select All Go to FILE - SAVE Selected Items, and save the report as BSOD.txt Open BSOD.txt in Notepad, copy all of the content, and paste it into your next reply
Here is the attached file.
|