[SOLVED] Audio popping when high CPU usage - Windows 10 Home

calebway95

Member
Joined
Aug 28, 2019
Posts
21
I am getting some odd audio cracking and popping when my CPU usage is high. I have ran the Latency Mon program and that pointed out the HDAudBus.sys running slowly and I ended up on these forums. Tried running the SFC command line and got a Corrupt files that cannot be fixed message. I am now here and attached is my CBS folder. Any help would be appreciated.
 

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Hi!

Please run the following:

Step#1 - DISM /RestoreHealth Scan
Warning:this fix is specific to the user in this thread. No one else should follow these instructions as it may cause more harm than good. If you are after assistance, please start a thread of your own.


  1. Right-click on the Start button and select Command Prompt (Admin)
  2. When command prompt opens, Copy (Ctrl+C) and Paste (Right-click > Paste) the following command into it, then press Enter
    Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth
  3. Once it finishes, copy and paste the following into the command-prompt window and press Enter. If prompted to overwrite the existing file go ahead.
    copy %windir%\logs\cbs\cbs.log "%userprofile%\Desktop\cbs.txt"
  4. Once this has completed please go to your Desktop and you will find CBS.txt => Please zip/upload to this thread.
    Please Note:: if the file is too big (over 7MB) to upload to your next post, please upload via a service such as Dropbox or One Drive or SendSpace and just provide the link.





Followed by two SFC Scans:

SFC Scan


  1. Click on the Start button and in the search box, type Command Prompt
  2. When you see Command Prompt on the list, right-click on it and select Run as administrator
  3. When command prompt opens, copy and paste the following commands into it, press enter after each

    sfc /scannow


    Wait for this to finish before you continue

    copy %windir%\logs\cbs\cbs.log "%userprofile%\Desktop\cbs.txt"
  4. This will create a file, cbs.txt on your Desktop. Please attach this to your next post.
 
I ran the first command and then the SFC twice as requested. I copied the log each time and named them.
 

Attachments

On the second scan no Integerity violations. On the first scan WRP found corrupt files and successfully repaired them.
 

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