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#1
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How old is your PSU?
I'm not saying...or contradicting what the other folks have suggested. For sure, their advice would be the first things to check..... All I am suggesting for your consideration? After me having spent, $500.00 bucks, just to learn? My PSU (power supply) was for crap...12 volt rail was bad. Many folks every where....say, that a "solid" PSU is the primary consideration. I knew it, read it and dismissed it. I was wrong and they were right. Bottom line....I have a new mother board...a new graphics card...new memory and have just now discovered.......I need a new reputable power supply... It shames to admit it here......I only hope....that it could be of help..... |
#2
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http://www.overclock.net/a/common-bs...r-overclocking
0x1E = increase vcore 1) I would first check your ram timings and voltages in your bios and make sure they are set at factory settings for the type of ram you are using. You could try the website of your RAM manufacturer to get that info if you don't have it already. 2) You mentioned you changed PSU. Did you do this before or after the BSOD started happening? Do you have a lot of peripherals drawing power? If your PSU is borderline to your power requirements, like maybe when your gaming and your GPU is drawing max power, it could cause a voltage spike and then you get the bsod 1E code. Simple test would be to disconnect some peripherals and see if you still have the problem. 3) You could try doing a mem test on your RAM for faulty ram. there's free software at the overlockers forum for that kind of thing. 4)Another way to save power and possibly make your system more stable, if you GPU came overclocked, get rivatuner and clock it down to stock settings. You can usually find those at the manufacture web site as well. If you still want to run overclock for gaming, simply save those settings to a different profile in rivatuner. |
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