I’m in BSOD h-e-l-l and need help from those of you who may have built a VideoGuys DIY9 around the ASUS P9X79 Pro motherboard like I did.
My once stable PC is now blue screening several times an hour! Sometimes I will boot it and not touch anything and 10 minutes later it BSOD’s all by itself without being touched! Sometimes it will BSOD before getting to the desktop and other times it may run for an hour or two just fine and then BSOD when I click shutdown. In this state it's unusable.
What changed you may ask? I broke the cardinal rule of PC maintenance… “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it!”.
During routine maintenance I thought it might be time to upgrade all of my drivers from ASUS and that required a new BIOS because I was still using a very old BIOS version from over a year ago and some of the newer BIOS’s said they had improvements in USB 3.0, etc. The problem is that ASUS changed BIOS structure from .ROM to .CAP for Windows 8 “full-functionality” and once upgraded, there is no going back to my old BIOS. How bad can it be, I thought? Maybe I might want to try Windows 8, I thought? So I flashed the BIOS to the latest level. What a BIG mistake!!!
I’m using the recommended memory for VideoGuys DIY9 which is G.SKILL Ripjaws Z Series 16GB (4 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1866 (PC3 14900) Desktop Memory Model F3-14900CL9Q-16GBZL. I remembered that when I first built this PC, it did not work correctly. I had to upgrade the BIOS from the factory and tweak the memory timings to get it stable. But it has been rock solid for over a year. This memory is XMP compatible so this time I select Profile 1 which seems to have the correct timings and boot the computer. Then I upgraded the Chipset drivers, SATA, LAN, Audio, etc. All seemed to be working well. So a week has gone by and I don’t really use my PC much anymore because I do all of my work on my Mac so I haven’t had the PC on for any extended amount of time since the upgrade. Now I turn it on and try and get a few hours of Vegas Pro editing done and it starts blue screening like crazy before I can even load Vegas Pro. What’s crazy you may ask? How’s this for a list of BSOD errors in the past two days:
I didn’t think that many things could be wrong at one time! Each time the BSOD error is a different. There were more but I got tired of writing the new ones down. Can anyone see a pattern? I ran memtest86 and it went through 3 passes clean with no errors so while I always suspect a bad RAM stick, the RAM seems to be OK. Should I run memtest86 longer? How long is long enough?
Here is my request:
The question for those of you who built the VideoGuys DIY9 and used an ASUS P9X79 PRO motherboard with G.SKILL Ripjaws Z Series 16GB DDR3 1866 (PC3 14900) memory (part# F3-14900CL9Q-16GBZL) recommended by VideoGuys.
Q1. If your BIOS version is 2002 or greater, what version are you using that is stable?
Q2. What memory timings are you using? (are you using XMP Profile 1 or 2 or default, or manual timings?)
This has been an absolute nightmare and I would appreciate any help you can provide.
Thanks in advance,
~jr
My once stable PC is now blue screening several times an hour! Sometimes I will boot it and not touch anything and 10 minutes later it BSOD’s all by itself without being touched! Sometimes it will BSOD before getting to the desktop and other times it may run for an hour or two just fine and then BSOD when I click shutdown. In this state it's unusable.
What changed you may ask? I broke the cardinal rule of PC maintenance… “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it!”.
During routine maintenance I thought it might be time to upgrade all of my drivers from ASUS and that required a new BIOS because I was still using a very old BIOS version from over a year ago and some of the newer BIOS’s said they had improvements in USB 3.0, etc. The problem is that ASUS changed BIOS structure from .ROM to .CAP for Windows 8 “full-functionality” and once upgraded, there is no going back to my old BIOS. How bad can it be, I thought? Maybe I might want to try Windows 8, I thought? So I flashed the BIOS to the latest level. What a BIG mistake!!!
I’m using the recommended memory for VideoGuys DIY9 which is G.SKILL Ripjaws Z Series 16GB (4 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1866 (PC3 14900) Desktop Memory Model F3-14900CL9Q-16GBZL. I remembered that when I first built this PC, it did not work correctly. I had to upgrade the BIOS from the factory and tweak the memory timings to get it stable. But it has been rock solid for over a year. This memory is XMP compatible so this time I select Profile 1 which seems to have the correct timings and boot the computer. Then I upgraded the Chipset drivers, SATA, LAN, Audio, etc. All seemed to be working well. So a week has gone by and I don’t really use my PC much anymore because I do all of my work on my Mac so I haven’t had the PC on for any extended amount of time since the upgrade. Now I turn it on and try and get a few hours of Vegas Pro editing done and it starts blue screening like crazy before I can even load Vegas Pro. What’s crazy you may ask? How’s this for a list of BSOD errors in the past two days:
REFERENCE_BY_POINTER - STOP 0x0000018
CACHE_MANAGER - STOP 0x0000034
(no name) - STOP 0x0000024
(no name) - STOP 0x000007E
BAD_POOL_HEADER - STOP 0x0000019
IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL - STOP 0x000000A
DRIVER_IRQL_NOT_LESS - STOP 0x00000D1 - DXGMMS1.SYS
QUOTA_UNDERFLOW - STOP 0x0000021
SYSTEM_SERVICE_EXCEPTION - STOP 0x000003B
I didn’t think that many things could be wrong at one time! Each time the BSOD error is a different. There were more but I got tired of writing the new ones down. Can anyone see a pattern? I ran memtest86 and it went through 3 passes clean with no errors so while I always suspect a bad RAM stick, the RAM seems to be OK. Should I run memtest86 longer? How long is long enough?
Here is my request:
The question for those of you who built the VideoGuys DIY9 and used an ASUS P9X79 PRO motherboard with G.SKILL Ripjaws Z Series 16GB DDR3 1866 (PC3 14900) memory (part# F3-14900CL9Q-16GBZL) recommended by VideoGuys.
Q1. If your BIOS version is 2002 or greater, what version are you using that is stable?
Q2. What memory timings are you using? (are you using XMP Profile 1 or 2 or default, or manual timings?)
This has been an absolute nightmare and I would appreciate any help you can provide.
Thanks in advance,
~jr