Kernel Power Event 41 and Event 1000 Help Needed

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DrWorm

PCHF Member
Mar 2, 2022
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Hi, so I'm working on my second computer and I keep getting Kernal Power Event ID 41 as well as Event ID 1000 dwm.exe. My PC components are listed below as well as their condition. I've also posted the PC part picker link if it is easier.

https://pcpartpicker.com/user/swiftfishy/saved/#view=vLrDjX

CPU: i3-9100f (New used / swapped from a new prebuilt) - Not Overclocked & Idle at 25c
CPU Cooler: Corsair H60 (New)
Mobo: Gigabyte H310M M.2 2.0 (New) - Bios version F15a
Ram: PNY XLR8 2x8GB DDR4-3200 (New)
GPU: MSI Gtx 1060 6GB (Used but never used) - Not overclocked
Psu: EVGA 600W 80+ (New)

I've been working on it all night. A lot of the parts are new because I replaced the old stuff that I thought was the problem (cpu, mobo, ram, psu).
Things I've tried:
  1. Reverting the Nvidia drivers back, uninstalling them completely, installing only old ones, installing only new ones, and I do not install the Geforce Experience
  2. /SFC scannow
  3. DISM.exe /Online /Cleanup-image /Restorehealth
  4. Changed the power settings for hard drive and sleep timer
  5. Turned off fast startup
  6. Updated Windows 10 (the problem started before the updates too)
  7. Uninstalled iCue Corsair Software
  8. Updated all drivers
I'm really at a loss right now. It works fine in Safe Mode it seems. But I have already tried every driver that I can think. It is also a fresh install of Windows 10 on a newly formatted SSD. Thanks for your help! I'll provide what I can
 
Do you get a bug check code in event 41?

When a computer shuts down or restarts because of a Stop error, Windows includes the Stop error data in Event ID 41 as part of the additional event data. This information includes the Stop error code (also called a bug check code), as shown in the following example:

EventData
BugcheckCode 159
BugcheckParameter1 0x3
BugcheckParameter2 0xfffffa80029c5060
BugcheckParameter3 0xfffff8000403d518
BugcheckParameter4 0xfffffa800208c010
 
For the ID 1000 instead of safe mode

How to perform a clean boot​



These steps might look complicated at first glance, but following them in order, step-by-step, will help you get you back on track.

Use the following steps to perform a clean boot in Windows 10. Perform a clean boot for Windows 7, Windows 8 and Windows 8.1

  1. Sign in to the computer as an administrator. If you don't have an administrator account, you can create one. Create a local user or administrator account in Windows 10.
  2. In the search box on the taskbar, type msconfig and select System Configuration from the results.
Search result - System Configuration


Important If the computer is connected to a network, network policy settings might prevent you from following these steps. Only use the System Configuration utility to change the advanced boot options on the computer with guidance from a Microsoft support engineer. Using the System Configuration utility might make the computer unusable.

  1. On the Services tab of System Configuration, select Hide all Microsoft services, and then select Disable all.
    System Configuration - Services tab - Hide all Microsoft services check box checked - Disable all
  2. On the Startup tab of System Configuration, select Open Task Manager.
    System Configuration - Startup tab - Open Task Manager button
  3. Under Startup in Task Manager, for each startup item, select the item and then select Disable.

    Task Manager - Startup tab
  4. Close Task Manager.
  5. On the Startup tab of System Configuration, select OK. When you restart the computer, it's in a clean boot environment. Follow troubleshooting steps to install, uninstall, or run your application. Your computer might temporarily lose some functionality while in a clean boot environment. Reset the computer to start normally after clean boot troubleshooting and resume functionality.


 
Do you have msi afterburner installed?
Alright I got some info, sorry it didn't alert me you responded:

  1. I have some event bug code
    1. BugcheckCode 126
    2. BugcheckParameter1 0xffffffffc0000005
    3. BugcheckParameter2 0xfffff804322732c7
    4. BugcheckParameter3 0xffff820988dd7738
    5. BugcheckParameter4 0xffff820988dd6f70
    6. SleepInProgress 0
    7. PowerButtonTimestamp 0
    8. BootAppStatus 0
    9. Checkpoint 0
    10. ConnectedStandbyInProgress false
    11. SystemSleepTransitionsToOn 0
    12. CsEntryScenarioInstanceId 0
    13. BugcheckInfoFromEFI false
    14. CheckpointStatus 0
    15. CsEntryScenarioInstanceIdV2 0
    16. LongPowerButtonPressDetected false
  2. I'm confused on the clean boot, what am I supposed to do once I do that?
  3. I'm not sure what chipset drivers for my motherboard are. Do you mean bios version? In order for the i3-9100f to work on this mobo, it needed f12 or greater. I updated it to f15. It is plugged into a power strip.
  4. I do have msi afterburner installed. I wanted to see if the GPU was overclocked. But it seems normal as far as I can tell.
 
You say computer runs fine in safe mode.
Does computer run the same with clean boot or does it still reboot.
Remove computer from powerstrip
uninstall msi afterburner

Whenever you install windows the first step is to install chipset drivers from the maker
 
Alright I got some info, sorry it didn't alert me you responded:

  1. I have some event bug code
    1. BugcheckCode 126
    2. BugcheckParameter1 0xffffffffc0000005
    3. BugcheckParameter2 0xfffff804322732c7
    4. BugcheckParameter3 0xffff820988dd7738
    5. BugcheckParameter4 0xffff820988dd6f70
    6. SleepInProgress 0
    7. PowerButtonTimestamp 0
    8. BootAppStatus 0
    9. Checkpoint 0
    10. ConnectedStandbyInProgress false
    11. SystemSleepTransitionsToOn 0
    12. CsEntryScenarioInstanceId 0
    13. BugcheckInfoFromEFI false
    14. CheckpointStatus 0
    15. CsEntryScenarioInstanceIdV2 0
    16. LongPowerButtonPressDetected false
  2. I'm confused on the clean boot, what am I supposed to do once I do that?
  3. I'm not sure what chipset drivers for my motherboard are. Do you mean bios version? In order for the i3-9100f to work on this mobo, it needed f12 or greater. I updated it to f15. It is plugged into a power strip.
  4. I do have msi afterburner installed. I wanted to see if the GPU was overclocked. But it seems normal as far as I can tell.
So I have a lot of Kernel Power Event 41's, so here are all the BugcheckCodes:
  • 30
  • 0
  • 80
  • 10
  • 156
I also have a lot of Errors coming up:
  • DistributedCOM Event ID 10005
  • Security-SPP Event ID 8198
  • Kernel-EventTracing Event ID 2
  • PerfNet Event ID 2004
A lot, like 20, DistributedCOM 10005 event errors...
 
Ram: PNY XLR8 2x8GB DDR4-3200
Also your ram is to fast for your motherboard
From the manual
2 x DDR4 DIMM sockets supporting up to 32 GB of system memory Dual channel memory architecture Support for DDR4 2666/2400/2133 MHz memory modules Support for ECC Un-buffered DIMM 1Rx8/2Rx8 memory modules (operate in non-ECC mode) Support for non-ECC Un-buffered DIMM 1Rx8/2Rx8/1Rx16 memory modules
And is to fast for your cpu from Click On Me

Memory Specifications​

Max Memory Size (dependent on memory type)
64 GB
Memory Types
DDR4-2400
 
Stay from event viewer unless we ask for something.
You will find thounsands of entries that mean nothing.
Ok sorry. Should I install both the Intel INF installation as well as the Intel Management Engine Firmware?

I also had slower memory before, but kept getting memory related bsod. Havent gotten those though since swapping.
 
Try with this to start
Ok, I installed the Intel INF and the the Intel Management Engine Firmware, so far so good. I know not to look at the event viewer, but so far the only thing I've seen are application errors. I'm trying to install Overwatch to test the stability
 
If problems continue, disable or remove any newly installed hardware
or software
From here https://neosmart.net/wiki/irql-not-less-or-equal/#:~:text=Symptom 1: “IRQL NOT LESS OR EQUAL” blue error screen,-The IRQL error&text=The IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL error can be,controller, network card, and others

install Overwatch to test the stability
I know this is a game
see above about software.
From that site I linked above
*** DO NOT DOWNLOAD ANY FIXIT SOFTWARE ***

 
do you have another video card you can test
Sorry it was getting late. So I left the computer run overnight to just see if anything would happen. No more errors or critical errors showed and it did not BSOD overnight either.

Once I got on this morning, I was trying Fix #2 from the link you provided as I was unable to find any option to disable the cache memory in the BIOS from Fix #1. As soon as I clicked "check for updates" the screen froze and I had to manually turn the computer off. Seems to be another Kernel Power Event.

I do not have another video card to test with it.

**Edit, just got a BSOD after restart of DPC_WATCHDOG_VIOLATION
 
Do you have any extra ram laying around ? Your ram is nor supported by your cpu or your motherboard
Edit, just got a BSOD after restart of DPC_WATCHDOG_VIOLATION
This error may occur due to the iastor.sys driver, which is not fully compatible with Windows 10.
Microsoft is currently investigating a solution to prevent the driver from being migrated when upgrading to Windows 10. For those of you already on Windows 10, you can work around this error by replacing the problematic driver with the Microsoft storahci.sys driver by following these steps:

  1. Right-click the Start icon and select Device Manager.
  2. Expand IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers.
  3. Select the controller with “SATA AHCI” in its name (such as Standard SATA AHCI Controller). To verify that you’ve selected the right controller, right-click the controller, select Properties, click the Driver tab, and then Driver Details. Verify that iastor.sys is a listed driver, and click OK.
  4. From the Driver tab, select Update Driver…
  5. Select Browse my computer for driver software.
  6. Select Let me pick from a list of device drivers on my computer.
  7. Select Standard SATA AHCI Controller.
Click Next, then Close, and then restart your computer.
 
Do you have any extra ram laying around ? Your ram is nor supported by your cpu or your motherboard

This error may occur due to the iastor.sys driver, which is not fully compatible with Windows 10.
Microsoft is currently investigating a solution to prevent the driver from being migrated when upgrading to Windows 10. For those of you already on Windows 10, you can work around this error by replacing the problematic driver with the Microsoft storahci.sys driver by following these steps:

  1. Right-click the Start icon and select Device Manager.
  2. Expand IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers.
  3. Select the controller with “SATA AHCI” in its name (such as Standard SATA AHCI Controller). To verify that you’ve selected the right controller, right-click the controller, select Properties, click the Driver tab, and then Driver Details. Verify that iastor.sys is a listed driver, and click OK.
  4. From the Driver tab, select Update Driver…
  5. Select Browse my computer for driver software.
  6. Select Let me pick from a list of device drivers on my computer.
  7. Select Standard SATA AHCI Controller.
Click Next, then Close, and then restart your computer.
I changed over the device driver to the Standard SATA AHCI Controller. I was able to update windows since I wasnt able to last time. As soon as it finished, I got another IRQL NOT LESS OR EQUAL, Kernel Power 41 BSOD. I do have other RAM, but it was the RAM that I just replaced. It's Ripjaw DDR4 3000.
 
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