PC freezing for a few seconds multiple times per day - no BSOD

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  • kal
    PCHF Member
    • Jan 2019
    • 19

    #1

    PC freezing for a few seconds multiple times per day - no BSOD

    Somewhat of a long winded post because no one has been able to help figure out what the problem is. I have posted on a few different forums and tried many solutions.

    The problem:
    My PC will intermittently freeze for up to 5 seconds and it occurs maybe 1 or 2 times per hour. If there is audio playing then it typically buzzes for the duration of the freeze. Sometimes if I am playing a game it will crash me out to the desktop. The problem has happened both when playing a game and when just browsing on chrome.

    My current PC setup:
    Windows 10 Education
    https://pcpartpicker.com/list/8yGRXP (I have since switched out the GTX 1080 for an RTX 2060)
    I am running 3 monitors connected to my graphics card (DVI/HDMI/displayport)

    Solutions that I have tried (in no particular order):
    • Reinstalled windows
    • Swapped out my GPU
    • Uninstalled and reinstalled the graphics drivers (multiple methods)
    • I ran “memtest86” overnight and it returned no errors
    • Ran “windows memory diagnostic” tool with no errors
    • I ran “FurMark” to test my GPU with no errors.
    • Updated BIOS to most recent version
    • Removed the overclock on my CPU
    • Uninstalled corsair link (this kept popping up in the logs that it “stopped working” so I just removed it. Logs are below.
    • Swapped out my GTX 1080 for an RTX 2060 on 1/24/19 and the problems still occurred.

    Misc info:
    When navigating to Control Panel\System and Security\Security and Maintenance\Reliability Monitor
    Error Logs 1-25-19 - Pastebin.com (updated 1/25/19)
  • jmarket
    PCHF Owner
    • Jan 2015
    • 7643

    #2
    Hi @SneakyAz and welcome to PCHF

    Please download MiniToolBox and save it to your desktop. Run the program by right clicking on it and selecting Run as administrator. When the program opens select the following boxes:

    Flush DNS
    Report IE Proxy Settings
    Reset IE Proxy Settings
    Report FF Proxy Settings
    Reset FF Proxy Settings
    List content of Hosts
    List IP Configuration
    List Winsock Entries
    List last 10 Event Viewer Errors
    List Installed Programs
    List Devices (Only Problems)
    List Users, Partitions and Memory size

    Please post the log in your next reply

    Comment

    • kal
      PCHF Member
      • Jan 2019
      • 19

      #3
      jmarket Here ya go! I thought it COULD be my graphics card because of the previous display driver error in the windows event logs. I did get approval for a refund on the graphics card but want to verify if that is the actual problem first. I appreciate you taking the time to help out.

      Comment

      • kal
        PCHF Member
        • Jan 2019
        • 19

        #4
        After further investigation I found these hardware errors in my security and maintenance path. Not sure what any of this means but maybe it will be useful for those of you more knowledgeable.
        Windows error logs - Pastebin.com

        Comment

        • jmarket
          PCHF Owner
          • Jan 2015
          • 7643

          #5
          Please download the Sysnative BSOD Dump + System File Collection App - save to Documents folder.

          Run the app - Double-click on the downloaded EXE file
          Output = new folder created in Documents + a zipped version – SysnativeFileCollectionApp folder + SysnativeFileCollectionApp.zip.

          Please note that the app averages ~3 minutes to run on most systems; other systems - it my take as long as 10-15 minutes to run. Please be patient.

          Also note: The app auto-zips the SysnativeFileCollectionApp output folder. It is located in your Documents folder.
          Windows Explorer should open and highlight the zipped folder

          Please attach the SysnativeFileCollectionApp.zip to your post and await further instructions

          Comment

          • kal
            PCHF Member
            • Jan 2019
            • 19

            #6
            Here is the zip

            Comment

            • blackbird11
              PCHF Member
              • Jan 2019
              • 4

              #7
              I think that’s graphics card issue as I had a similar issue. Replacing the card solved my problem

              Comment

              • kal
                PCHF Member
                • Jan 2019
                • 19

                #8
                Originally posted by blackbird11
                I think that’s graphics card issue as I had a similar issue. Replacing the card solved my problem
                Do you know of any tests I could do to narrow it down to the GPU for certain? I just don’t want to swap this for a new card and end up finding out I have a different problem. May be my only option at this point as much as it sucks. I have been all across the internet and no one so far has been able to narrow it down.

                Comment

                • jmarket
                  PCHF Owner
                  • Jan 2015
                  • 7643

                  #9
                  Let’s stress test your GPU. Download Furmark and install it.

                  FurMark Setup:
                  • If you have more than one GPU, select Multi-GPU during setup
                  • In the Run mode box, select “Stability Test” and “Log GPU Temperature”
                    Click “Go” to start the test (Looks like it’s “BURN-IN test” now)
                  • Run the test until the GPU temperature maxes out - or until you start having problems (whichever comes first).
                    NOTE: Set the alarm to go off at 90ºC. Then watch the system from that point on. If the system doesn’t display a temperature, watch it constantly and turn it off at the first sign of video problems. DO NOT leave it it unmonitored, it can DAMAGE your video card!!!
                    If the temperature gets above 100ºC, quit the test - the video card is overheating.
                  • Click “Quit” to exit
                    What you are looking for:
                  • excessive heat from the GPU (report back with anything over 90ºC)
                  • problems with the video display (picture is distorted or jumbled, picture turns black, etc)
                  • problems reported by the program (I haven’t seen this, but “just in case”)

                  Comment

                  • kal
                    PCHF Member
                    • Jan 2019
                    • 19

                    #10
                    Update: I have a new GPU in my PC and experienced the freeze again. Could it possibly be RAM? I ran the windows diagnostic test but it said all was ok. Not really sure where to look from here.

                    Comment

                    • kal
                      PCHF Member
                      • Jan 2019
                      • 19

                      #11
                      Update: I also ran the memtest86 overnight and it returned no errors.

                      I see this popped up in my security and maintenance/problem details:

                      Description
                      A problem with your hardware caused Windows to stop working correctly.

                      Problem signature
                      Problem Event Name: LiveKernelEvent
                      Code: 117
                      Parameter 1: ffffe385fb668460
                      Parameter 2: fffff8021044ce38
                      Parameter 3: 0
                      Parameter 4: 25d8
                      OS version: 10_0_17763
                      Service Pack: 0_0
                      Product: 256_1
                      OS Version: 10.0.17763.2.0.0.256.121
                      Locale ID: 1033

                      Comment

                      • kal
                        PCHF Member
                        • Jan 2019
                        • 19

                        #12
                        I updated my main post to better format it and include all solutions attempted so far. There is a new pastebin link with some new errors from this morning that seem to be nvidia related?

                        Comment

                        • jmarket
                          PCHF Owner
                          • Jan 2015
                          • 7643

                          #13
                          Have you tried using DDU to uninstall the nVidia driver and then doing a fresh install of the latest nVidia drivers?

                          Comment

                          • kal
                            PCHF Member
                            • Jan 2019
                            • 19

                            #14
                            Originally posted by jmarket
                            Have you tried using DDU to uninstall the nVidia driver and then doing a fresh install of the latest nVidia drivers?
                            Ha I actually just did this about 20 minutes ago. I only installed the drivers and opted to not install geforce experience/shadowplay stuff to see if that has any impact. I will report back with results!

                            Comment

                            • kal
                              PCHF Member
                              • Jan 2019
                              • 19

                              #15
                              So I had another freeze and this time it just went right into a PC reboot. I don’t even know what to do at this point, I am so frustrated and I haven’t been able to find a solution anywhere online yet. Spending hours each day reinstalling stuff and running programs..

                              Comment

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