BSOD screen palying games
Hi, everyone I have a little trouble with my PC, Then i play games like a NFS:Carbon demo or Nfs:Underground 2 i get a BSOD screen with text STOP: 0x0000007F (0x0000000D, 0x00000000, 0x00000000, 0x00000000) I got only this screen playing games, but playing Counter-strike all works fine.
Hi, everyone I have a little trouble with my PC, Then i play games like a NFS:Carbon demo or Nfs:Underground 2 i get a BSOD screen with text STOP: 0x0000007F (0x0000000D, 0x00000000, 0x00000000, 0x00000000) I got only this screen playing games, but playing Counter-strike all works fine. I have tested my ram with memtes, I done 1 loop and no errors found, scanned for viruses, cheked disks. Maybe someone can help me?
i added my pc report and two latest dump files
8-ReportofARNISPC.txt
9-Minidump.zip
i added my pc report and two latest dump files
8-ReportofARNISPC.txt
9-Minidump.zip
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Can be any of three things - or really none of them. Always hard to say about these Stop errors:
1) While the memory modules are sound, it looks like the timing is different. One module is faster at read/write than the other. 99% or the time, it will use the slower timing for both, but under some programs, this is enough to cause a read/write malfunction.
2) Video card - you are using an FX 5200 128 - it is not renowned for its game play. You might consider a more game oriented nVidia card or get the FX 5200 in the 256 flavor.
3) Video drivers - for any given system, the nVidia driver works better or worse depending on the drivers chosen. The latest is not always the greatest. Because the drivers write to memory, where they rewrite to sometimes comes into conflict with some programs seeking the same memory addresses. Or, it can happen that the driver causes a program to move to an alternate address and the program progressively increases its memory usage until it exhausts the memory pool.
1) While the memory modules are sound, it looks like the timing is different. One module is faster at read/write than the other. 99% or the time, it will use the slower timing for both, but under some programs, this is enough to cause a read/write malfunction.
2) Video card - you are using an FX 5200 128 - it is not renowned for its game play. You might consider a more game oriented nVidia card or get the FX 5200 in the 256 flavor.
3) Video drivers - for any given system, the nVidia driver works better or worse depending on the drivers chosen. The latest is not always the greatest. Because the drivers write to memory, where they rewrite to sometimes comes into conflict with some programs seeking the same memory addresses. Or, it can happen that the driver causes a program to move to an alternate address and the program progressively increases its memory usage until it exhausts the memory pool.