O
O
oandrew2011-11-23 19:40:15
Windows
oandrew, 2011-11-23 19:40:15

How can this be?

Six months ago, the built-in sound card broke, I bought a regular 6-channel Manhattan pci card.
Everything was ok, but the other day I wanted to play Counter Strike. I launch - crash, bsod (memory_managment error) and reboot ...
I tried different Counter Strike and different games with 3d graphics - bsod.
I tested ram - everything is ok.
I already thought the PPC came to the video card, chose a new one.
And then I remembered that over the past six months I had only installed this sound card, I did nothing more with the system unit.
Pulled it out - everything is ok! Everything is stable!
How can this be? Video card and sound card conflict?
Why is this strange for me, because the sound card performed its functions normally, and the video card, in turn, performed its own. 3dmark tests work fine, without any bsod...
Everything happened on Windows 7.
Who knows what it was?

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

7 answer(s)
P
padlik0, 2011-11-23
@padlik0

Question: did you try to change Windows?
Well, it can be useful to put the card in another slot.
Maybe software interrupts were superimposed due to some software ...

F
FilimoniC, 2011-11-24
@FilimoniC

There was a similar problem (another map) with native firewood, which 7ka found herself.
After a while, everything started to slow down (at 0 loading) and only during the game (I sin on the "chips" of games in terms of surround sound). The installation of firewood from the manufacturer's website helped.
ALC662 chip, if anything

F
fishbone, 2011-11-23
@fishbone

Who exactly causes BSOD according to logs? Maybe DirectX is to blame? What does dxdiag say?

M
MaLikoV, 2011-11-23
@MaLikoV

Go into bios and disable onboard audio.

E
Evengard, 2011-11-23
@Evengard

Looks like DirectSound messes up. This means that the wood is crooked. Try to update the firewood for the sound system.

F
FedorDFK, 2011-11-23
@FedorDFK

bluescreenview is here to help.

S
Sniks, 2011-11-24
@sniks

Maybe the interrupts are fighting with each other?
The solution, as mentioned above, is to insert it into another slot and disable the built-in card in BIOS.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question