S Schirmy New member Joined Jan 3, 2019 Posts 2 Jan 3, 2019 #1 Hey all, New here and been having issues with BSOD and I think it's related to my GPU and its drivers. Here is my log/dump. Windows 10 Home, Ryzen 1700x, 16gb 2400mhz RAM, GTX 1070 FE, MSI B350M Bazooka, 650w PSU, Desktop. Attachments SysnativeFileCollectionApp.zip 2.2 MB · Views: 1
Hey all, New here and been having issues with BSOD and I think it's related to my GPU and its drivers. Here is my log/dump. Windows 10 Home, Ryzen 1700x, 16gb 2400mhz RAM, GTX 1070 FE, MSI B350M Bazooka, 650w PSU, Desktop.
C cwsink Sysnative Staff, BSOD Kernel Dump Expert Staff member Joined Apr 3, 2017 Posts 520 Jan 3, 2019 #2 Hi Schirmy, I've seen your posts on other forums and I recommended you update your motherboard BIOS to the latest in a reply on one of them. The dump file in the zip you posted here shows you're still running a very old BIOS version and many have been created since to address stability issues. It's quite possible a BIOS update could solve the problem. Is there a reason you haven't updated to the latest from here? Last edited: Jan 3, 2019
Hi Schirmy, I've seen your posts on other forums and I recommended you update your motherboard BIOS to the latest in a reply on one of them. The dump file in the zip you posted here shows you're still running a very old BIOS version and many have been created since to address stability issues. It's quite possible a BIOS update could solve the problem. Is there a reason you haven't updated to the latest from here?
S Schirmy New member Joined Jan 3, 2019 Posts 2 Jan 3, 2019 #3 cwsink said: Hi Schirmy, I've seen your posts on other forums and I recommended you update your motherboard BIOS to the latest in a reply on one of them. The dump file in the zip you posted here shows you're still running a very old BIOS version and many have been created since to address stability issues. It's quite possible a BIOS update could solve the problem. Is there a reason you haven't updated to the latest from here? Click to expand... The latest or second-to-latest BIOS update requires a certain chipset to utilize, apparently. I don't really know how to check my current chipset.
cwsink said: Hi Schirmy, I've seen your posts on other forums and I recommended you update your motherboard BIOS to the latest in a reply on one of them. The dump file in the zip you posted here shows you're still running a very old BIOS version and many have been created since to address stability issues. It's quite possible a BIOS update could solve the problem. Is there a reason you haven't updated to the latest from here? Click to expand... The latest or second-to-latest BIOS update requires a certain chipset to utilize, apparently. I don't really know how to check my current chipset.
C cwsink Sysnative Staff, BSOD Kernel Dump Expert Staff member Joined Apr 3, 2017 Posts 520 Jan 3, 2019 #4 The latest chipset installer from MSI for your motherboard is here. I'd recommend you download and install it and then reboot the computer. Then see about updating to the latest BIOS. Page 36 of the English motherboard user manual explains how and I'd recommend using the M-Flash tool method from within the BIOS settings menus.
The latest chipset installer from MSI for your motherboard is here. I'd recommend you download and install it and then reboot the computer. Then see about updating to the latest BIOS. Page 36 of the English motherboard user manual explains how and I'd recommend using the M-Flash tool method from within the BIOS settings menus.