From: NYTELTECH on
I'm hoping that someone out there will be able to help with this issue:

About a year and a half ago, I decided to build a PC. I thought I would go
with the newest and best hardware I could find (in my mind). Long story
short about hardware is that I got an A-bit AW8D motherboard, 64 bit Intel
LGA 775 Processor 3.73Ghz, and 2Gb Corsair memory. I have an older Cd-rom
drive that came off of my old system - a samsung combo drive, the traditional
floppy drive. I have 2 HDD's - one is 250GB, which I use for storage of the
things I can't live without (kids' pictures, videos, music collection), you
get the point -- This HDD is just storage. My OS resides on a 500Gb HDD, and
it started crashing constantly after several months with no problems. I
reloaded XP pro x64 build 3190 and my problems went away for another several
months (after losing a few pictures and about 100Gb of music and movies). I
learned my lesson, so I read up on restore points and creating backups of my
system. I have performed countless restores now, but my restart, and errors
(BSOD) issues keep getting worse each time. I'm not sure what other
information I need to post, excetpt that I am getting stop errors for
anything IRQ -- I thought this was no longer an issue? Also for CD-rom --
Bad block, but I have no disk in drive. Kernel mode exceptions, Page faults,
and Device driver errors to name a few. I have looked up all info for
drivers, and I am up to date with all of them, as well as BIOS. Please, any
suggestions would help. I'm about to take this thing outside and start a
bonfire. Thank you.
From: NYTELTECH on

A problem has been detected and W\windows has been shut down to prevent damage
to your computer.

SYSTEM SERVICE EXCEPTION

If this is the first time you've seen this Stop error screen,
restart your computer. If this screen appears again, follow
these steps:

Check to make sure any new hardware or software is properly installed.
If this is a new installation, ask your hardware or software manufacturer
for any windows updates you might need.

If problems continue, disable or remove any newly installed hardware
or software. Disable BIOS memory options such as caching or shadowing.
If you needto use safe mode to remove or disable components, restart
your computer, press F8 to select Advanced Startup Options, and then
select safe mode.

Technical information:

*** STOP: 0x0000003B (0x00000000C0000005, 0xFFFFF97FFF0D809F,
0xFFFFFADFC4D29BB0, 0
x0000000000000000)

*** win32k.sys - Address FFFFF97FFF0DB809F base at FFFFF97FFF000000,
DateStamp
45e6f310

Beginning dump of physical memory

Physical memory dump complete.
Contact you system administrator or technical support group for further
assistance.


#############This happened @5:30 pm after powering up my
computer.############################
From: Greg R on
You have a pretty good overclock going on there if your CPU is at 3.73Ghz.
What Intel CPU (E6300, E6600 and so on) are you using and what is the
temperature for the CPU showing at in your BIOS?


"NYTELTECH" <NYTELTECH(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:AD63E601-88E6-4DB3-9F01-83A445DA4CF0(a)microsoft.com...
> I'm hoping that someone out there will be able to help with this issue:
>
> About a year and a half ago, I decided to build a PC. I thought I would
> go
> with the newest and best hardware I could find (in my mind). Long story
> short about hardware is that I got an A-bit AW8D motherboard, 64 bit Intel
> LGA 775 Processor 3.73Ghz, and 2Gb Corsair memory. I have an older Cd-rom
> drive that came off of my old system - a samsung combo drive, the
> traditional
> floppy drive. I have 2 HDD's - one is 250GB, which I use for storage of
> the
> things I can't live without (kids' pictures, videos, music collection),
> you
> get the point -- This HDD is just storage. My OS resides on a 500Gb HDD,
> and
> it started crashing constantly after several months with no problems. I
> reloaded XP pro x64 build 3190 and my problems went away for another
> several
> months (after losing a few pictures and about 100Gb of music and movies).
> I
> learned my lesson, so I read up on restore points and creating backups of
> my
> system. I have performed countless restores now, but my restart, and
> errors
> (BSOD) issues keep getting worse each time. I'm not sure what other
> information I need to post, excetpt that I am getting stop errors for
> anything IRQ -- I thought this was no longer an issue? Also for CD-rom --
> Bad block, but I have no disk in drive. Kernel mode exceptions, Page
> faults,
> and Device driver errors to name a few. I have looked up all info for
> drivers, and I am up to date with all of them, as well as BIOS. Please,
> any
> suggestions would help. I'm about to take this thing outside and start a
> bonfire. Thank you.

From: NYTELTECH on
no overclock, never been able to. It's an Intel pentium extreme edition
processor with Hyperthreading technology. The reason I had to go with x64,
it wouldn't let me install a 32 bit OS

"Greg R" wrote:

> You have a pretty good overclock going on there if your CPU is at 3.73Ghz.
> What Intel CPU (E6300, E6600 and so on) are you using and what is the
> temperature for the CPU showing at in your BIOS?
>
>
> "NYTELTECH" <NYTELTECH(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:AD63E601-88E6-4DB3-9F01-83A445DA4CF0(a)microsoft.com...
> > I'm hoping that someone out there will be able to help with this issue:
> >
> > About a year and a half ago, I decided to build a PC. I thought I would
> > go
> > with the newest and best hardware I could find (in my mind). Long story
> > short about hardware is that I got an A-bit AW8D motherboard, 64 bit Intel
> > LGA 775 Processor 3.73Ghz, and 2Gb Corsair memory. I have an older Cd-rom
> > drive that came off of my old system - a samsung combo drive, the
> > traditional
> > floppy drive. I have 2 HDD's - one is 250GB, which I use for storage of
> > the
> > things I can't live without (kids' pictures, videos, music collection),
> > you
> > get the point -- This HDD is just storage. My OS resides on a 500Gb HDD,
> > and
> > it started crashing constantly after several months with no problems. I
> > reloaded XP pro x64 build 3190 and my problems went away for another
> > several
> > months (after losing a few pictures and about 100Gb of music and movies).
> > I
> > learned my lesson, so I read up on restore points and creating backups of
> > my
> > system. I have performed countless restores now, but my restart, and
> > errors
> > (BSOD) issues keep getting worse each time. I'm not sure what other
> > information I need to post, excetpt that I am getting stop errors for
> > anything IRQ -- I thought this was no longer an issue? Also for CD-rom --
> > Bad block, but I have no disk in drive. Kernel mode exceptions, Page
> > faults,
> > and Device driver errors to name a few. I have looked up all info for
> > drivers, and I am up to date with all of them, as well as BIOS. Please,
> > any
> > suggestions would help. I'm about to take this thing outside and start a
> > bonfire. Thank you.
>
From: Charlie Russel - MVP on
There's really only two possibilities, here. One is hardware, the other is
an infection. Frankly, I think the infection the less likely.

I'm betting hardware, and that means basic troubleshooting. The areas you
need to look at include:
1.) heat
2.) memory
3.) power

So, let's start with heat. What's the inside temperature of the motherboard
and the CPU? (memory too if you have it.) If you don't know these numbers,
your mobo mfg should have included a utility to monitor them, or there are
third party ones out there you can run a trial of. If we're running hot,
there are ways to help. Probably the best way is a better case design, and a
CPU cooler designed to do the job better than the default one. Personally,
I'd want to get the numbers here down to 50 degrees C. or less.

Next, memory. It's very possible that there's a weak memory chip somehwere.
Corsair is decent memory, but even the best can have a problem. I'd run a
good, thorough, memory test overnight on the memory. Something like
memtest86, set to it's most thorough, and set to run continuously.

Finally, power. How big is your power supply, and what other peripherals are
in that box?

--
Charlie.
http://msmvps.com/xperts64
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/profile/charlie.russel


"NYTELTECH" <NYTELTECH(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:AD63E601-88E6-4DB3-9F01-83A445DA4CF0(a)microsoft.com...
> I'm hoping that someone out there will be able to help with this issue:
>
> About a year and a half ago, I decided to build a PC. I thought I would
> go
> with the newest and best hardware I could find (in my mind). Long story
> short about hardware is that I got an A-bit AW8D motherboard, 64 bit Intel
> LGA 775 Processor 3.73Ghz, and 2Gb Corsair memory. I have an older Cd-rom
> drive that came off of my old system - a samsung combo drive, the
> traditional
> floppy drive. I have 2 HDD's - one is 250GB, which I use for storage of
> the
> things I can't live without (kids' pictures, videos, music collection),
> you
> get the point -- This HDD is just storage. My OS resides on a 500Gb HDD,
> and
> it started crashing constantly after several months with no problems. I
> reloaded XP pro x64 build 3190 and my problems went away for another
> several
> months (after losing a few pictures and about 100Gb of music and movies).
> I
> learned my lesson, so I read up on restore points and creating backups of
> my
> system. I have performed countless restores now, but my restart, and
> errors
> (BSOD) issues keep getting worse each time. I'm not sure what other
> information I need to post, excetpt that I am getting stop errors for
> anything IRQ -- I thought this was no longer an issue? Also for CD-rom --
> Bad block, but I have no disk in drive. Kernel mode exceptions, Page
> faults,
> and Device driver errors to name a few. I have looked up all info for
> drivers, and I am up to date with all of them, as well as BIOS. Please,
> any
> suggestions would help. I'm about to take this thing outside and start a
> bonfire. Thank you.