PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

Could BIOS setting cause BSOD?

 
 
rll
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      8th Oct 2007
Ever since I had Best Buy do some upgrading of my Vista Ultimate computer,
it has crashed almost daily, sometimes twice a day. The crashes occur
regardless of whether the computer is in use or not. The result is a blue
screen with the message Power State Driver Failure. That is the only part of
the text I am able to read before the computer shuts down and restarts. One
of the things Best Buy did was install a new graphics card. My power supply
isn't the problem, by the way. I have a 600 watt supply. The new card is a
PCIe nVidia. A couple of days ago, I installed nVidia's latest driver for
their GeForce cards. I also decided to look at my BIOS settings for no
particular reason. In the BIOS, there was a option to set the video from
Onboard or PCI or PCIe. Mine was set on PCI, even though the card is PCIe. I
made the correct selection in the BIOS and restarted. I have my fingers
crossed here, but there hasn't been a crash since.

Could this incorrect BIOS setting have been the source of my problems? Or
was it the new nVidia driver? Or both? Or have a just been lucky? Any info
would be appreciated.

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
Carey Frisch [MVP]
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      8th Oct 2007
The correct BIOS setting should be PCIe.
Incorrect settings would definitely cause a crash.

--
Carey Frisch
Microsoft MVP
Windows Shell/User

---------------------------------------------------------------

"rll" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:F4EE0F18-B4D5-43F9-BF0C-(E-Mail Removed)...
Ever since I had Best Buy do some upgrading of my Vista Ultimate computer,
it has crashed almost daily, sometimes twice a day. The crashes occur
regardless of whether the computer is in use or not. The result is a blue
screen with the message Power State Driver Failure. That is the only part of
the text I am able to read before the computer shuts down and restarts. One
of the things Best Buy did was install a new graphics card. My power supply
isn't the problem, by the way. I have a 600 watt supply. The new card is a
PCIe nVidia. A couple of days ago, I installed nVidia's latest driver for
their GeForce cards. I also decided to look at my BIOS settings for no
particular reason. In the BIOS, there was a option to set the video from
Onboard or PCI or PCIe. Mine was set on PCI, even though the card is PCIe. I
made the correct selection in the BIOS and restarted. I have my fingers
crossed here, but there hasn't been a crash since.

Could this incorrect BIOS setting have been the source of my problems? Or
was it the new nVidia driver? Or both? Or have a just been lucky? Any info
would be appreciated.

 
Reply With Quote
 
Curious
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      8th Oct 2007
Also go in to system advanced settings and uncheck the option for automatic
restart on a BSOD so that you can read the BSOD screen.

"Carey Frisch [MVP]" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:E35B559B-9866-47A9-B412-(E-Mail Removed)...
> The correct BIOS setting should be PCIe.
> Incorrect settings would definitely cause a crash.
>
> --
> Carey Frisch
> Microsoft MVP
> Windows Shell/User
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------
>
> "rll" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:F4EE0F18-B4D5-43F9-BF0C-(E-Mail Removed)...
> Ever since I had Best Buy do some upgrading of my Vista Ultimate computer,
> it has crashed almost daily, sometimes twice a day. The crashes occur
> regardless of whether the computer is in use or not. The result is a blue
> screen with the message Power State Driver Failure. That is the only part
> of
> the text I am able to read before the computer shuts down and restarts.
> One
> of the things Best Buy did was install a new graphics card. My power
> supply
> isn't the problem, by the way. I have a 600 watt supply. The new card is a
> PCIe nVidia. A couple of days ago, I installed nVidia's latest driver for
> their GeForce cards. I also decided to look at my BIOS settings for no
> particular reason. In the BIOS, there was a option to set the video from
> Onboard or PCI or PCIe. Mine was set on PCI, even though the card is PCIe.
> I
> made the correct selection in the BIOS and restarted. I have my fingers
> crossed here, but there hasn't been a crash since.
>
> Could this incorrect BIOS setting have been the source of my problems? Or
> was it the new nVidia driver? Or both? Or have a just been lucky? Any info
> would be appreciated.
>


 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Re: BSOD if dual core support is enabled in BIOS Mike C. Windows Vista General Discussion 13 17th Dec 2006 09:19 PM
Re: BSOD if dual core support is enabled in BIOS Fox Windows Vista General Discussion 0 14th Dec 2006 11:24 PM
Re: BSOD if dual core support is enabled in BIOS MicroFox Windows Vista General Discussion 0 14th Dec 2006 07:41 PM
BSOD when setting machine username and password =?Utf-8?B?QWRyaWFuQGRldHJvaXQ=?= Windows XP Setup 0 30th Oct 2006 03:19 PM
Is there a workaround for the "Your BIOS is not ACPI Compliant" BSOD during install? Zack Whittaker \(R2 Mentor\) Windows Vista Installation 5 13th Mar 2006 08:29 PM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:51 AM.