Constant BSOD’s with new 9800 GT

January 25th, 2020

I just recently bought an ASUS 9800 GT HybridPower. After installing it, I get multiple blues screens of death. Could this be related to the nVidia drivers? My PC ran fine with an ATI 2600 PRO. Any ideas? Thanks in advance!
PC Setup:
CPU: Intel Core2Quad Q6600 @ 2.6 GHz
M/B: Intel DP35DP (P35 Chipset)
GFX: ASUS 9800 GT HybridPower 512 MB DDR3 (OC Core Clock to 625 MHz)
GFX Driver: 178.24 nVidia Drivers
HDD: WD 320 GB
RAM: 2 GB (2x Nanya 400MHz DDR2)
OS: Windows Vista Ultimate SP1
Many of the BSOD’s are either from the nVidia drivers or one of the Windows system files.
Again, Thanks in advance!

Answer #1
Does does it blue screen when you boot up? Randomly when you are gaming? When you are doing something completely different?
Updating the drivers is always the best thing to try!
Answer #2
Random blue screens. And the drivers are the most up to date! : /
Answer #3
If there is no way to fix it, maybe you should reformat, and have a clean install of Windows. This will minimize the chances of other drivers interfering, etc.
Answer #4
Hmm what error does it give when you blue screen?
Answer #5
If there is no way to fix it, maybe you should reformat, and have a clean install of Windows. This will minimize the chances of other drivers interfering, etc.
I’ve tried that!
Hmm what error does it give when you blue screen?
With numerous different ones, normally ones like IQRL_EQUAL_OR_NOT_EQAUL or something like that or latest one was NTFS.SYS error and then its starts dumping memory.
Answer #6
can you say the error code? Its in the form of 0x (0x000, etc) To stop it from restarting automatically, go to my computer>right click properties>advanced tab>settings under start-up and recovery>uncheck auto restart under system failure
Answer #7
can you say the error code? Its in the form of 0x (0x000, etc) To stop it from restarting automatically, go to my computer>right click properties>advanced tab>settings under start-up and recovery>uncheck auto restart under system failure
Ill jot down the code next time it happens. Hope I can find the cause
Answer #8
With numerous different ones, normally ones like IQRL_EQUAL_OR_NOT_EQAUL or something like that or latest one was NTFS.SYS error and then its starts dumping memory.
usually the “IQRL” blue screen means something is wrong with your ram but since it is showing different blue screens each time it can be so many things. have you completely uninstalled all your old drivers first including the registry keys left over?
Answer #9
With numerous different ones, normally ones like IQRL_EQUAL_OR_NOT_EQAUL or something like that or latest one was NTFS.SYS error and then its starts dumping memory.
usually the "IQRL" blue screen means something is wrong with your ram but since it is showing different blue screens each time it can be so many things. have you completely uninstalled all your old drivers first including the registry keys left over?

I re-installed Vista to clear all those problems. I got the error code:
STOP: 0X000000D1 (0X807ECC82, 0X00000002, 0X0000008, 0X807ECC82)
Answer #10
Do you use a logitech mouse? This is what came up
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/810980
Answer #11
Graphics card IRQ conflict…Remove any PCI cards and try…or plug to a different slot…
Answer #12
Do you use a logitech mouse? This is what came up
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/810980

No I dont, I use a Microsoft mouse
Graphics card IRQ conflict...Remove any PCI cards and try...or plug to a different slot...
I only use a single Graphics card and only have one PCI-E 16x slot. I only have one other PCI product, which is a TV Tuner, but shouldn’t conflict as it’s through a different system than PCI-E.
My latest BSOD code is
0X81A51CFD
Answer #13
I only have one other PCI product
That’s all what it takes to cause IRQ conflict…Sometimes it even conflicts with other built in devices…
Answer #14
you uninstall the previous nvidia driver before installing the new one
you watch your temps ?
try installing the updated chipset driver
Answer #15
you uninstall the previous nvidia driver before installing the new one
you watch your temps ?
try installing the updated chipset driver

1. I have a fresh installation of Windows, so I didn’t have to uninstall.
2. Temps arn’t a problem as I sometimes get them 10 minutes after I turn my PC on.
3. GPU or Motherboard? I’ll try both
Answer #16
Just got a new error! BCP1:001904AA
BCP2:AA856A94
BCP3:AA856790
BCP4:876ABC1E
It was caused by ntfs.sys
Answer #17
you run a check disk
choose fix errors and don’t choose recover bad blocks, it will probably tell you to reboot
ntfs.sys is a driver for the ntfs file system

 

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