Follows measurings with SpeedFAN
[img]http://i.imgur.com/ZJMGN7e.png[/img]
By the BCCOdes and stuff, I'm thinking its either the PSU or the RAM dying, whatcha think about the PSU readings?
Speedfan is inaccurate, use HWmonitor: [URL]http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html[/URL]
Software readings of PSU voltages are really inaccurate, the only way to tell for sure is to use a multimeter on a disconnected, jump-started PSU.
Have you ran [URL="http://www.memtest.org/download/4.20/memtest86+-4.20.usb.installer.zip"]memtest86+[/URL]? The link will download an installer to make a bootable memtest USB stick.
What's your specs?
If it's BSOD's it could just be a driver problem.
[QUOTE=AugustBurnsRed;39617728]Software readings of PSU voltages are really inaccurate, the only way to tell for sure is to use a multimeter on a disconnected, jump-started PSU..[/QUOTE]
Uh, that's the worst way to test the voltage output of a PSU. And testing only the voltage tells you nothing about the quality of the PSU regardless.
An unloaded and faulty PSU can test fine in the voltage department, but have terrible ripple. Only will loading it down show you out of range voltages. And you'll need an oscilloscope to see the ripple. Out of range ripple is just as important as out of range voltage, both can brick the motherboard, GPU and other components.
WELL, Thanks for the tips, but (for a good two days now) fixed this by taking away one of the RAM sticks. It's always the darn ram! now to buy some 8GB sticks :P
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