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Computer shuts down at random time no BSOD or error.

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Boggin:
The link in both mine and your post work fine for me.

Sometimes MS sites can be buggy or it can be your AV program blocking.

See if either work in Safe Mode with Networking or after running theses commands from a command prompt.

netsh winsock reset catalog

ipconfig /flushdns

ipconfig /registerdns

exit

Now reboot.

For a while it was hitty missy whether I could get this MS Fixit to load other than with a blank page under the header. http://support.microsoft.com/kb/971058

Shane:
Did you try another power supply yet by chance?

Also what I do as well is check the event viewer and normally I will find entries that either say windows is hutting down or the last system shutdown was unexpected (Which normally means Power loss)

One of those should be in there from when it happens. Either the first one will happen in the event viewer before the shutdown while the other one will be logged after the system comes back up.

Any chance the event logs still have data from the last time it happed and you can upload the system and application logs to me?

Shane

BarneyFife:
Sorry I was away from this for a while.
Boggin....the link worked and I was able to read the article. I checked all scheduled tasks and none are anything I shouldn't have.
Shane, I am uploading the System Events log. Is that what you wanted to see?

New info: It still shuts down after a day or two. I ran the Dell Diag Utility (F12 on bootup) on every device from the mother board to the hadr drives and ram, its all coming back passed all tests. The other day it shutdown and when I rebooted it came up with no boot drive (0) But on a reboot its been fine and I ran the drive tests again and its good. Its a one year old Seagate drive.
I think this is the power supply and I will have to go get one an try it. I just haven't had time and now I may be facing blizzard in the next couple of days!!!! I hate snow:(

Boggin:
This may help with SCM Event ID 7000 http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314357

This one for SCM Event ID 7023 but clicking on this Event then on Copy/Copy details as text in the lower right pane so as to paste the full details. https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc756318(v=ws.10).aspx

Doing the same for those Info Event IDs 7035 and 7036 can also be useful.

This one looks particularly useful for resolving DCOM 1005 errors. http://windowsitpro.com/systems-management/use-dcomcnfgexe-stop-dcom-10000-and-10005-errors

As for monitoring the temps and fan speeds, HWMonitor will do that for you without having to boot up into the BIOS.

You can also keep an eye on the voltages as well, but whether you'll be able to catch any drop off prior to a shutdown.....

http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html

Shane:
Let me k now how the new power supply does. :wink:

Shane

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