desert_dunes Posted April 4, 2016 Posted April 4, 2016 what are some error cods that you will see with an unstable OC and what do they mean? like 0x00000019 , 0x00000101 , 0x000000c5 , 0x0000000a il edit this post after i get any more codes system specs: i5-6500, 8GB of ripjaws V RAM, wd blue HDD, gigabyte ga-z170x-gaming 6, evga 750W G2 PSU, MSI r9 380 4 GB graphics card Quote
Guest TheMadDutchDude Posted April 4, 2016 Posted April 4, 2016 vCore related for the most part, I'd imagine. Quote
desert_dunes Posted April 4, 2016 Author Posted April 4, 2016 im already pushing the Vcore to 1.4V, what is the highest 6 hour stable speed OCers seem to be getting? if you use use air for cooling Quote
Guest TheMadDutchDude Posted April 4, 2016 Posted April 4, 2016 That would depend on what temps you've got and what speed you're running. Quote
desert_dunes Posted April 5, 2016 Author Posted April 5, 2016 the temp seems to top out at about 60C at 125.00Mhz BCLK, but i haven't done any testing with prime95 or some other program, just CPUz's "stress CPU" option Quote
kinjo Posted September 5, 2016 Posted September 5, 2016 I m having this bad pool header problem on my pc Quote
kinjo Posted September 6, 2016 Posted September 6, 2016 (edited) Here’s the mail I got If you're getting a BAD_POOL_HEADER bugcheck, you're experiencing a crash due to memory corruption. This could be due to faulty hardware such as RAM, or due to a buggy or incompatible driver. In this case, check the items below for running chkdsk, sfc, and driver verifier. Driver Verifier is the proper thing to turn to for memory corruption issues such as this, and chkdsk and sfc can turn up disk or file corruption. General guidance for dealing with memory corruption: Consider running chkdsk on all partitions. Let chkdsk complete on each partition and see if that helps. For memory corruption cases such as you seem to be experiencing, it can be helpful to use Driver Verifier. To enable Driver Verifier... start->verifier.exe->OK->Create standard settings- >Next->select driver names from a list->Next->sort by Provider->select all non-Microsoft drivers->Finish, and OK your way out of the dialog. Then, reboot and use the system as you normally would, and wait for a problem. In the event that the system does not boot completely after enabling driver verifier, boot into Safe Mode and run driver verifier, and tell it to delete the changes. Wait for a bugcheck to occur after enabling verifier as described, and then upload it to your SkyDrive, and provide a link. Also consider running SFC /SCANNOW. If you boot into safe mode, do you still experience bugchecks? What about if you do a clean boot, or device clean boot? Consider testing memory with Windows Memory Diagnostic or memtest86. Note that memory that passes tests is not necessarily good memory - it just hasn't failed a test. Consider systematically eliminating RAM from the system - run with a couple of modules for a while, and see how things go. Then try the other modules. Other common suggestions include ensuring drivers are up to date (including video drivers), as well as ensuring that you're using the latest BIOS. How To Fix “BAD POOL HEADER†BSOD? – By deskdecode Edited October 17, 2016 by kinjo Quote
xpower Posted September 15, 2016 Posted September 15, 2016 here's the thing now i does as this website said How To Fix “BAD POOL HEADER†BSOD? | DESKDECODE.COM and now my system wont able to start what to do now does anybody knows something some stupid rookie offering help on that site :banana: in most cases that error related to lot of things etc, Os,unstable clock, mem related. if you provide more info that may be easy to determine the problem Quote
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