BSOD (0xA) (Info inside)

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(Originally posted it in the "ask 8 pack" section but i think that sub-thread is dead)

Just received a BSOD while playing Roblox of all things, quick whoscrashed run reported this (below)..

On my old Intel system i believe 0xA was to do with memory if i remember correct? I did notice the memory is rated upto 1.4v and with XMP/DOCP running it is currently on 1.35v as i know XMP/DOCP can not play ball with every setup it maybe possible more voltage could solve the issue?

*ECO mode is enabled*

Dark Pro "8Pack Edition"
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/team...00c16-3600mhz-dual-channel-kit-my-002-8p.html

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On Tue 08/06/2021 19:00:38 your computer crashed or a problem was reported
crash dump file: C:\Windows\Minidump\060821-7359-01.dmp
This was probably caused by the following module: ntoskrnl.exe (nt+0x3F6C90)
Bugcheck code: 0xA (0xFFFFD880067D6339, 0x2, 0x0, 0xFFFFF80307F1A85A)
Error: IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL
file path: C:\Windows\system32\ntoskrnl.exe
product: Microsoft® Windows® Operating System
company: Microsoft Corporation
description: NT Kernel & System
Bug check description: This indicates that Microsoft Windows or a kernel-mode driver accessed paged memory at DISPATCH_LEVEL or above. This is a software bug.
This bug check belongs to the crash dump test that you have performed with WhoCrashed or other software. It means that a crash dump file was properly written out.
The crash took place in the Windows kernel. Possibly this problem is caused by another driver that cannot be identified at this time.
 
Hard to say, could be either a hardware or software related issue.

I'd start with basic low level baseline checks, update the BIOS, check BIOS settings, run memtest, run cpu and gpu stress tests, check drive health.
Make sure everything at a hardware level is stable under a constant load and that temps are within acceptable limits.

Then I would move on to software related checks.
SFC and DISM system file integrity checks, driver updates, check out the installed applications and monitor what's running in background, check versions, changelogs, known issues etc.
 
Hard to say, could be either a hardware or software related issue.

I'd start with basic low level baseline checks, update the BIOS, check BIOS settings, run memtest, run cpu and gpu stress tests, check drive health.
Make sure everything at a hardware level is stable under a constant load and that temps are within acceptable limits.

Then I would move on to software related checks.
SFC and DISM system file integrity checks, driver updates, check out the installed applications and monitor what's running in background, check versions, changelogs, known issues etc.

Been waiting for a bios update for a while but the latest is still in beta, Version 3501 Beta Version.
 
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