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Computer temps? Further information? Computer specs?
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CAS: Azza Toledo 301 Gaming Mid-Tower Case CPU: Intel® Core™ i7-2700K 3.50 GHz 8MB Intel Smart Cache LGA1155 (All Venom OC Certified) CS_FAN: Default case fans FAN: Asetek 510LC Liquid Cooling System 120MM Radiator & Fan (Enhanced Cooling Performance + Extreme Silent at 20dBA) (Single Standard 120MM Fan) HDD: 120GB Corsair Force GT Series SATA-III 6.0Gb/s SSD - 555MB/s Read & 515MB/s Write [+82] (Single Drive) MEMORY: 8GB (2GBx4) DDR3/1600MHz Dual Channel Memory MOTHERBOARD: * [CrossFireX] Asus P8Z68-V LX Intel Z68 Chipset DDR3 ATX Mainboard LucidLogix Virtu and Intel Smart Response Technology & 7.1 HD Audio, GbLAN, USB3.0, 2x SATA-III RAID,2 3 PCIe Gen2, 2 PCIe X1 & 2 3CI (All Venom OC Certified) NETWORK: Onboard Gigabit LAN Network OS: Microsoft® Windows 7 Home Premium [+104] (64-bit Edition) POWERSUPPLY: 850 Watts - CoolerMaster Silent Pro Gaming 80 Plus Power Supply VIDEO: AMD Radeon HD 6770 1GB GDDR5 16X PCIe Video Card [-33] (Major Brand Powered by AMD) VIDEO2: AMD Radeon HD 6770 1GB GDDR5 16X PCIe Video Card [+116] (Major Brand Powered by AMD
are the specs, temps are in the mid 50's to high 60's after a few hours of gaming. idle at mid to high 30's. so nothing bad in terms of temps.
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Definitely a driver issue then.
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On March 03 2012 16:00 Josh_rakoons wrote: Definitely a driver issue then. IT was clear in the pic he posted.... glad you caught on
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I've used drive sweeper to remove the drivers for the graphics cards, I've uninstalled them a few times from the devices page, i've re installed drivers a few times, so I just don't know how to correct the issue.
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Try following the advice I gave you last time you asked?
You've got two cards, so try it with each individually.
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I had tried that as I listed above about drive sweeper. I then ran it with the solo cards and it still did the same thing both times. Before it never really blue screened that often. The screen would just freeze and sit there. so I think it is software related. However, I just don't have much experience with them so I have to ask for help in situations like this.
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0124 is usually a result of an unstable cpu overclock.
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Ok, I can mess with that then, would the display driver failing be a completely different issue then?
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Depends. If you have ten different BSODs and only one or two of them are in the display driver, it could be general instability causing the display driver problems.
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If you can reliably get the bsods to occur (quickly), you might as well try to eliminate as many variables as possible. Run on integrated graphics for awhile (if you can), make sure your RAM isn't bad, reset your cmos. If possible, run on a different HDD with a clean OS (just to make sure Windows isn't f***ing you).
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I once had a problem similar to this. Turned out my computer RAM was causing the issue.
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Got to chime in here on the issue, I've used a Corsair Force 3 SSD that kept bluescreening since the drive would stop responding at random, as you explained it might go a week without problem and sometimes it happens 5 times during the course of an hour. The BSOD's I got also looked exactly the same as yours do and you're also using a Corsair drive. I solved it by installing new firmware to the SSD and I've now been without a blue screen for about 3 weeks so I'm 99% sure that it was the issue.
So you could try to see what firmware you are running with Corsair's update tool and if it's anything lower than 1.3.3 you can update it. You can get all the information needed and the update tool over at Corsair's Forum: http://forum.corsair.com/forums/showthread.php?t=100162
Best of lucks!
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