EastHastings
Technical User
i had a custom computer system built for me by my cousin. It's got an Intel, Pentium 4, 2.40 gHz, a MSI 655 MAX-LS motherboard, a GeForce FX 5800 128MB, Corsair 533mhz 2x256MB RAM (512MB total), and a 120.0 gig HDD. in addition to all of this, the system has 6 FANS TOTAL! one on the side, one on the top, two in the back, and two on the power supply. there is plenty of ventilation and the like.
anyway. the computer has randomly been rebooting. it would mostly reboot during high-end games (most notably Morrowind). in addition to this, games seemed to crash a whole lot. sometimes, however, the computer would reboot when it was just sitting idly at the desktop. twice, the computer rebooted, and as the desktop was loading, it rebooted again! the rebooting is fairly random, as far as i can tell. it does it during grueling activities (high-end games, full-screen DIVX movies), but it also does it during idle moments. the other day, it rebooted when i clicked "apply" on a new background.
i've tried pretty much every solution told to me. i used to have a SB Audigy installed, but someone suggested that it may be the problem, so i had it removed. i bumped up the power supply from 350 to 400 in case of a power problem. i tried a manual Windows Fix, because i was getting the "Windows has encountered a serious error" on bootup occasionally. i tried ALOT, and the computer STILL reboots. i thought i had solved the problem with the latter. upon each reboot, the computer was logging an event in the Event Viewer, called "Save Dump". the error spoke about the computer "rebooting from a bug check". someone forwarded me to a help page ( ) because i was having that exact problem. boy, was i glad. i did the Workaround method by disabling the virtual memory. i thought i had fixed it for good. the computer still reboots, but it's stopped logging "save dump" events in the Event Viewer, so now there's no real evidence of the rebooting at all.
my cousin who built the computer is equally stumped. he wants to take the computer to his house for a couple of days to diagnose, but i'd really like a second opinion on what's wrong. at this point, the only remaining problem i can think of is the RAM. SOMEONE HELP ME! i'm going nuts here.
anyway. the computer has randomly been rebooting. it would mostly reboot during high-end games (most notably Morrowind). in addition to this, games seemed to crash a whole lot. sometimes, however, the computer would reboot when it was just sitting idly at the desktop. twice, the computer rebooted, and as the desktop was loading, it rebooted again! the rebooting is fairly random, as far as i can tell. it does it during grueling activities (high-end games, full-screen DIVX movies), but it also does it during idle moments. the other day, it rebooted when i clicked "apply" on a new background.
i've tried pretty much every solution told to me. i used to have a SB Audigy installed, but someone suggested that it may be the problem, so i had it removed. i bumped up the power supply from 350 to 400 in case of a power problem. i tried a manual Windows Fix, because i was getting the "Windows has encountered a serious error" on bootup occasionally. i tried ALOT, and the computer STILL reboots. i thought i had solved the problem with the latter. upon each reboot, the computer was logging an event in the Event Viewer, called "Save Dump". the error spoke about the computer "rebooting from a bug check". someone forwarded me to a help page ( ) because i was having that exact problem. boy, was i glad. i did the Workaround method by disabling the virtual memory. i thought i had fixed it for good. the computer still reboots, but it's stopped logging "save dump" events in the Event Viewer, so now there's no real evidence of the rebooting at all.
my cousin who built the computer is equally stumped. he wants to take the computer to his house for a couple of days to diagnose, but i'd really like a second opinion on what's wrong. at this point, the only remaining problem i can think of is the RAM. SOMEONE HELP ME! i'm going nuts here.