Windows 10 BSOD while gaming

The GTX1050Ti is not a power hog dual slot and around 75w draw but I would want at least good quality 550w for a little headroom going forward with all the accessories I see plugged into usb ports now a little extra amps on the 5v doesn't hurt.
 
What said that it was the latest version?

The actual driver installation?

The Intel site?

Device Manager?

Regards. . .

jcgriff2
Sorry didn't clarify that yes the driver installation said that it was the latest version. I have ran driver verifier for 6 hours yesterday night and there was no problem also.Also i've experience 1 bsod today but as usual the screen froze and there was no bsod screen.I don't think that they give out computer parts in the country i live in for tests so i will have to buy it i guess.
 
But the thing that frustrates me the most is when i get bsod it doesn't boot to bsod information screen.So we can't get more information.
 
Well, since we are more than likely dealing with a hardware issue here, dump files really would not help us very much.

Dump files were invented to help software/driver developers to debug their programs (source code) - not to diagnose hardware problems. Dump files assume that the hardware platform is stable in order to tell the software developer which module and which line in that program caused the crash. And all of this must be converted from hex to be of any use to the programmer/coder.

No dump file will ever tell you which piece of hardware is failing. The best that a dump can do is tell us that an I/O error occurred, which usually means that a problem occurred with a hard drive. But which hard drive? That info the dump remains silent on.

But the dump will never tell us that the PSU is bad; that the motherboard has a problem; that a cable or wiring has gone bad - never, ever happen.

Regards. . .

jcgriff2
 
But then after the test you should be able to return it for a full refund.

That is what many do here in the USA.
Well it's a little complicated here. I will run Driver Verifier for 24hours now.

Maybe the way to go first is to run your PSU in another system and really tax it (consume as much power as possible) and see if BSODs develop before you go out and buy a new PSU to test your system.

OR - borrow a PSU from someone else's system and test it in your system and see what happens.
 
Maybe the way to go first is to run your PSU in another system and really tax it (consume as much power as possible) and see if BSODs develop before you go out and buy a new PSU to test your system.

OR - borrow a PSU from someone else's system and test it in your system and see what happens.
Well, since we are more than likely dealing with a hardware issue here, dump files really would not help us very much.

Dump files were invented to help software/driver developers to debug their programs (source code) - not to diagnose hardware problems. Dump files assume that the hardware platform is stable in order to tell the software developer which module and which line in that program caused the crash. And all of this must be converted from hex to be of any use to the programmer/coder.

No dump file will ever tell you which piece of hardware is failing. The best that a dump can do is tell us that an I/O error occurred, which usually means that a problem occurred with a hard drive. But which hard drive? That info the dump remains silent on.

But the dump will never tell us that the PSU is bad; that the motherboard has a problem; that a cable or wiring has gone bad - never, ever happen.

Regards. . .

jcgriff2
Well i'm hoping that it's a software issue because the prices for computer parts went to the roof after i bought the system.The people i know that have computers don't have great computers so borrowing unfortunately is not an option and i don't have another desktop pc so can't try my psu also.
 
Well i'm hoping that it's a software issue because the prices for computer parts went to the roof after i bought the system.The people i know that have computers don't have great computers so borrowing unfortunately is not an option and i don't have another desktop pc so can't try my psu also.
You don't need a "great" system's PSU to test a different CPU in your system. You just need a different one.

Also, you could easily install your PSU in someone else's "inferior" system, but load lots o apps to bring the power needed up toward your PSU's limit and see what happens with their system.

You cannot ruin someone's system by doing a PSU test.

John
 
You don't need a "great" system's PSU to test a different CPU in your system. You just need a different one.

Also, you could easily install your PSU in someone else's "inferior" system, but load lots o apps to bring the power needed up toward your PSU's limit and see what happens with their system.

You cannot ruin someone's system by doing a PSU test.

John
Yeah i'm waiting for driver verifier before trying that but i think i didn't tell you guys something important.When the pc freezes/crashes with no bsod screen and i have to force shutdown if i try to immediately try to turn in on the pc turns on for 1 second then turns itself off then it tries to power on but power goes off it goes like this if i dont pull the computer plug off and let it rest for 5-10 minutes.
 

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