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lost files
qaz:
Your BSOD subtype gives no further clues: unknown.
thanx very much satrow, will keep an eye on it and if i happens again will remove the most recent program , 360 security center
--- Quote from: qaz on July 06, 2018, 11:05:29 am ---
--- Quote from: satrow on July 06, 2018, 10:40:50 am ---A quick scan through the wall of text and I'm thinking some kind of interference between Emsisoft, Malwarebytes Chameleon and/or 360.cn drivers and the kernel, they all run close to the Windows kernel and any glitch there could easily cause a BSOD.
Bad RAM can't be ruled out either. The chances of the kernel itself being at fault are miniscule.
Carrona's site says:
--- Quote ---STOP 0x0000001A: MEMORY_MANAGEMENT
Usual causes: Device driver, memory, kernel
--- End quote ---
Your BSOD subtype gives no further clues: unknown.
thanx very much satrow, will keep an eye on it and if i happens again will remove the most recent program , 360 security center
--- End quote ---
--- End quote ---
qaz:
--- Quote from: qaz on July 06, 2018, 11:05:29 am ---
--- Quote from: satrow on July 06, 2018, 10:40:50 am ---A quick scan through the wall of text and I'm thinking some kind of interference between Emsisoft, Malwarebytes Chameleon and/or 360.cn drivers and the kernel, they all run close to the Windows kernel and any glitch there could easily cause a BSOD.
Bad RAM can't be ruled out either. The chances of the kernel itself being at fault are miniscule.
Carrona's site says:
--- Quote ---STOP 0x0000001A: MEMORY_MANAGEMENT
Usual causes: Device driver, memory, kernel
--- End quote ---
Your BSOD subtype gives no further clues: unknown.
thanx very much satrow, will keep an eye on it and if i happens again will remove the most recent program , 360 security center
--- End quote ---
--- End quote ---
Boggin:
Going back to what you were saying about the RAM modules - are you using a desktop or laptop ?
When you remove the modules from a laptop you should always note where the slots are but are clearly visible and will be the same for each module.
To check that each is okay, remove each one then go Start - type memory and click on Memory Diagnostic and see what that reports.
If one is bad then that should be apparent from the start when you boot up with only that module installed.
Does Speccy recognise both modules ?
For the bad memory module problem, have you replaced that module or just cleaned up the pins ?
qaz:
ah ha,...didnt think of cleaning pins. will try
it is a desktop.
can u clarify this pls: "When you remove the modules from a laptop you should always note where the slots are but are clearly visible and will be the same for each module." do u mean put each modual backing the same slot?
memtest 86 said memory passed test [one pass] . ive always wanted to know how to start windows memory test...thanx.
speccy sees all 3 strips as one total . just calls it 3 gb. i need a replacement strip of ddr2, each strip is 1gb
Boggin:
I advised running memory diagnostic on just one module at a time because the diagnostic whether it's MemTest86+ or Windows own, if one or more modules are okay, that can mask a bad one.
It's advised to run MemTest86+ over 8 passes on each stick but because this can take some time, to run it overnight.
On my Toshiba laptops, the slots are on the right of the sticks but when you replace/refit them you can see where they go.
To clean the pins, use either a spirit or rub gently with a clean pencil eraser and brush away any debris.
It doesn't matter which slot you put the modules back in to what they were as long as they are the correct ones - a laptop usually just has two.
When you expand RAM in Speccy it should expand further to the slots.
How do you know that one of the modules is bad ?
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