BSOD on Resume

T

Travis King

When I put my computer to sleep, it goes to sleep for less than a second,
then it resumes from sleep. It'll show the welcome screen for maybe a
second or two, then a BSOD will appear. The BSOD message is:

*** STOP: 0x00000124 (0x00000000, 0x852823E0, 0xB2000000, 0x00070F0F)

What I have noticed is this does not occur when I set my BIOS to S1 (POS)
suspend mode, but it does occur in S3 suspend mode. I would prefer to use
S3 due to the fact the the system almost entirely shuts off in S3 instead of
all the fans staying running in S1.

In event viewer, in friendly view, this is what I had. (Under
Diagnostics-Performance\Operational)

BootTsVersion 2
BootStartTime 2007-08-12T01:02:23.640Z
BootEndTime 2007-08-12T01:05:04.474Z
SystemBootInstance 122
UserBootInstance 121
BootTime 85920
MainPathBootTime 55020
BootKernelInitTime 22
BootDriverInitTime 2717
BootDevicesInitTime 5505
BootPrefetchInitTime 62162
BootPrefetchBytes 578433024
BootAutoChkTime 0
BootSmssInitTime 7099
BootCriticalServicesInitTime 1961
BootUserProfileProcessingTime 23783
BootMachineProfileProcessingTime 1368
BootExplorerInitTime 4803
BootNumStartupApps 6
BootPostBootTime 30900
BootIsRebootAfterInstall false
BootRootCauseStepImprovementBits 0
BootRootCauseGradualImprovementBits 0
BootRootCauseStepDegradationBits 0
BootRootCauseGradualDegradationBits 0
BootIsDegradation false
BootIsStepDegradation false
BootIsGradualDegradation false
BootImprovementDelta 0
BootDegradationDelta 0
BootIsRootCauseIdentified false

System Specs:
Windows Vista Home Premium
AMD Sempron 64 2800+ (Socket 754) OC'd @ 2GHz
1.5GB PC-2700 RAM
Asus K8N Motherboard
ATI Radeon X1600PRO AGP 8x 256MB GDDR2 Video Card
Creative Audigy
etc.
etc.
 
J

John Barnes

You should check to see if you have updated ACPI drivers available, and also
check for BIOS updates. These are the most common sources of these
problems.
 
T

Travis King

I'll check that out. Thanks.
John Barnes said:
You should check to see if you have updated ACPI drivers available, and
also check for BIOS updates. These are the most common sources of these
problems.
 
T

Travis King

BIOS was already up-to-date. Couldn't find any ACPI drivers. (Vista said
that it had the best match already.) I found a website that said to adjust
a few ACPI settings such as enabling ACPI 2.0 support, Video BIOS to retest
on resume, and the like. When I did those settings, it ended up making my
computer not work. (It just sat there on with the LEDS lit doing nothing.)
I had to shut it down and clear the CMOS to bring it back to life.
 

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