Constant blue screens on windows 10

Hello all,

I've had this problem for a couple of days now. Some time ago I started getting blue screens after messing around using Process lasso, updating ethernet drivers and such. Before, this PC was working like a charm even though the components are all used. In safe mode everything is working normally as of now.

I decided to clean install Windows 10. All went ok but at the installation phase, I started getting blue screens yet again pointing to kernell. Somehow after numerous retries I managed to get Windows installed, but whenever I now start up my PC normally, it just blue screens in a minute or two. I have no idea what I can do to make it work and I am starting to run out of ideas. I will list my specs below and what I have already tried, and minidump files.

Minidump files point to ntoskrnl.exe but I don't know what I can do to fix it.

Specs:

AMD Ryzen 3600

EVGA GTX 1070

MSI X570-A Pro

Kingston 16 GB DDR4 3100mhz

Windows 10 Pro 64bit version 10.0.19045 Build 19045

What I have tried:

Memtest 86, 4 passes, no errors

Driver updates for motherboard from MSI (Chipset drivers gave me an error regarding some .dll files)

BIOS Updated

SFC and DISM

No GPU driver installed, I'll probably try and install it now.

Minidump zip file

Thank you.

Update:

For the people who might be reading this in the future,

I believe I have fixed this issue. In one of my dump files it stated that amdppm.sys had failed in addition to kernel.

What I did was as follows;

Boot in safe mode

Navigate to amdppm in regedit and set Start value to "4"

Reboot PC into normal mode and this stopped the blue screens for me

I downloaded chipset drivers from motherboard manufacturers site and installed, as I got an error while trying to install in in Safe Mode

Restarted PC

Set amdppm Start value back to "3", as having the value as "4" doesnt allow your CPU to "overclock" itself as AMD Ryzen CPUs do

And thats it, been up now for 30 some minutes, before it was crashing after 1 or 2 minutes.

Answer
Answer
Hi Dave,

I honestly cannot suggest you replace hardware without definitive proof a component has failed, that would not be fair for me to do.

It would be best to have your hardware checked at a PC Repair Shop to determine if there is a hardware fault.
___________________________________________________________________

Power to the Developer!

MSI GV72 - 17.3", i7-8750H (Hex Core), 32GB DDR4, 4GB GeForce GTX 1050 Ti, 256GB NVMe M2, 2TB HDD

1 person found this reply helpful

·

Was this reply helpful?

Sorry this didn't help.

Great! Thanks for your feedback.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback.

 
 

Question Info


Last updated April 18, 2025 Views 226 Applies to: