![]() ![]() ![]() Yes it's possible for that to get corrupted, or if you picked up any malware, get corrupted, or even a slight bump while it's working. It's a couple of spinning disc's, spun by black rubber bands. I have a 20 year old pentium II 350MHz (OC to 400MHz) that still works like brand new. The whole pc will get old and die or get out-dated long before a cpu calls it quits. 20Gb is a huge amount if stuff to get rid of, generally you don't find more than 3-4Gb in either of my pc's, I use CCleaner at least every other week just to get rid of all the internet crud my daughter seems to accumulate.Ħ5☌ while gaming is perfectly acceptable for a cpu and stock cooler, and age of cpu is irrelevant, cpus themselves are the single hardest component in any pc to kill. There are so many that I cant remember all of them. I have seen this error before but it's not the only one. Upadte: Nevermind it crashed again with a blue screen with a memory management error without opening any games. I could also try to open up the pc and clean the dust if it helps. The gpu and ram are very new and I doubt there is a problem. If it is indeed a hardware problem, I guess it could be the hdd or the cpu since they are the oldest and cheapest in my computer. So now I'm going to boot and test if the RAM is good with a USB ISO. However games and web pages keep crashing and one game tells me it detected hardware failure and shows this page: I watched the cpu temperature and it is 60-65 C while gaming. The pc is full of games, I'm planning to get new hdd. I tried to clean some space with it but it only cleaned about 20GB. Okay so I fixed some registry stuff with CCleaner and the blue screens stopped, for now at least. You can also get rid of hibernation, it uses of your ram size, so if you have 16Gb of ram, it'll free up 12Gb that windows separates automatically from your usage.įor temp watching I prefer Realtemp for Intel cpu's, it's as accurate as it gets for software and is not intrusive and is easy to use. If there's no room to expand the page file as needed, the cpu freaks out and you get a bsod.Ĭlean out the hdd, using CCleaner will dump all the crud you've got stored up in internet temp files, windows cache temp files etc which can free up a bunch of room. Windows has a page file it uses for temporary holding of stuff as it adds all the data up before transfer to gpu or hdd etc. ![]() Could it be a hard drive problem? It is about 3 years old and almost full.įull hdds can be an issue. I guess I could use a program to watch the cpu temperature before the crashes. I don't think it is outdated drivers, I checked everything. I haven't OC'ed but overheating could be possible since I have a small box with lots of cables and a big gpu(gtx 970) on a micro-ATX. You only end up frustrated and waste a bunch of time. You only end up frustrated and waste a bunch of time.įigure out the cause, then fix that, don't just jump to conclusions and hope it's fixed. A reset of windows can't hurt, but may not fix the issue, and might just change the issue as now you have to reinstall a bunch of stuff, just filling up temp files and making that the cause.įigure out the cause, then fix that, don't just jump to conclusions and hope it's fixed. Also I'd recommend (under tools) that you run it's registry cleaner once in 's while and make sure you do any backups first.īsod is caused by a variety of things, everything from overheating to software conflicts to driver issues to bad or unstable OC. CCleaner is good for that, left on default settings, it'll clean out the junk files etc. Cleaning it both physically and software wise is part of regular maintenance. Maintenence is always important with a pc. You may not exactly understand what it's telling you, but you can ask or Google what it means and that'll send you in the right direction. It'll list the critical errors that are causing the bluescreens. ![]()
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