BSOD

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17 Nov 2011
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852
I've the 3570K overclocked to 4.5GHz which is stable with 1.295V and 1.320V at full load with Gigabyte Z77 D3H motherboard, 8GB RAM and using onboard graphics, have overclocked around a year ago but recently these 1-2 weeks, I keep getting BSOD each day, where can I find my BSOD dump so I can show you guys to help me out what causing it to happen
 
I've just got a BSOD, here's the error in BlueScreenView,

1a3HA.jpg


I've searched the error code and it seems to be drivers related but all my drivers are up to date
 
do you have vcore voltage response set to fast and pwm phase control set to extreme performance in the bios? this will help with stability

as will flashing both bios chips to the same version,spam alt and f10 at gigabyte splash screen till you see the message appear that its flashing the backup bios
 
do you have vcore voltage response set to fast and pwm phase control set to extreme performance in the bios? this will help with stability
What's it under in the BIOS?

as will flashing both bios chips to the same version,spam alt and f10 at gigabyte splash screen till you see the message appear that its flashing the backup bios
You mean flash the latest BIOS version?

Also in these few days, I keep constantly getting BSOD,

OdHIS.jpg
 
m.i.t/advanced voltage settings

I mean have both bios chips running same bios version pressing alt and f10 at splash screen as fast as you can together will do this
 
do you have vcore voltage response set to fast and pwm phase control set to extreme performance in the bios? this will help with stability
VCore Voltage Response is Fast and PWH Phase Control is Auto

I mean have both bios chips running same bios version pressing alt and f10 at splash screen as fast as you can together will do this
I kept pressing Alt and F10 when the Gigabyte screen comes up but it boot straight to Windows
 
It doesn't matter about the BIOS chips,its hard to do but does work

Set pwm phase control to extreme performance from auto
 
Speeds up the reaction of the power phases I think,see how it goes,there's few other things you can try later
 
that error can be down to drivers/bios/virus/memory

id update all your motherboard/gpu drivers/chipset drivers ect,update to latest bios if you havn't already and do a full virus scan

cant think whatelse you can try,maybe play with ram settings if its still doing it after you've tried the above
 
If you take a look at the link that Nickolp1974 posted in post #3, the OCUK bluescreen code list will tell you:-

0x0A = unstable RAM/IMC, increase QPI first, if that doesn't work increase vcore

0x50 = RAM timings/Frequency or uncore multi unstable, increase RAM voltage or adjust QPI/VTT, or lower uncore if you're higher than 2x

0x1E = increase vcore

Looks like your overclock has become unstable over time.
 
that error can be down to drivers/bios/virus/memory

id update all your motherboard/gpu drivers/chipset drivers ect,update to latest bios if you havn't already and do a full virus scan
I've the Gigabyte Z77 D3H motherboard, should I flash version F18 or F19G?

Looks like your overclock has become unstable over time.
How do I reset my overclock so I can overclock it again to a stable one?

Do I need to wipe OS and data when doing a new overclock?

So after a period of time, overclock will become unstable?
 
I've the Gigabyte Z77 D3H motherboard, should I flash version F18 or F19G?


How do I reset my overclock so I can overclock it again to a stable one?

Do I need to wipe OS and data when doing a new overclock?

So after a period of time, overclock will become unstable?

Just go into the bios and click on default settings.
 
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