No Error Messages For Computer Crash Or Reboot
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Make the $50 Amazon Fire Tablet More Like Stock Android (Without Rooting) Subscribe l l FOLLOW US TWITTER GOOGLE+ FACEBOOK GET UPDATES BY EMAIL Enter your email below to get exclusive access to our best reliability monitor windows 10 articles and tips before everybody else. RSS ALL ARTICLES FEATURES ONLY TRIVIA Search How-To the computer has rebooted from a bugcheck Geek How to Find Out Why Your Windows PC Crashed or Froze Computers crash and freeze. Your Windows PC may have automatically rebooted
Event 41 Kernel-power
itself, too -- if so, it probably experienced a blue screen of death when you weren't looking. The first step in troubleshooting is finding more specific error details. These will help you identify the problem. For example,
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the tools here may point the finger at a specific device driver. This could mean that the device driver itself is buggy, or that the underlying hardware is failing. Either way, it will give you a place to start searching. Check the Reliability Monitor RELATED ARTICLEReliability Monitor is the Best Windows Troubleshooting Tool You Aren't Using The Reliability Monitor offers a quick, user-friendly interface that will display recent system and application crashes. It was added kernel power 41 in Windows Vista, so it will be present on all modern versions of Windows. To open it, just tap the Windows key once and type "Reliability." Click or press Enter to launch the "View reliability history" shortcut. If Windows crashed or froze, you'll see a "Windows failure" here. Application crashes will appear under "Application failures." Other information here may actually be useful -- for example, it shows when you installed various pieces of software. If the crashes started occuring after you installed a specific program or hardware driver, that piece of software could be the cause. You can use the "Check for solutions to problems" link here for some help. However, this feature usually isn't very helpful and it's rarely found possible solutions in our experience. In a best case scenario, it might advice you to install updated hardware drivers. RELATED ARTICLEUsing Event Viewer to Troubleshoot Problems The Reliability Monitor is useful because it shows events from the Event Viewer in a more user-friendly way. If not for the Reliability Monitor, you'd have to get this information from the Windows Event Viewer itself. To do so, launch the tool with a Start menu search for "Event Viewer," select "System" under "Windows Logs," and look for "Error" messages. These are the same error messages you can view in the Reliability Monitor. However, many other messages you don
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is being sued by Enigma Software because of a negative review of SpyHunter. A case kernel-power 41 (63) like this could easily cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. If we have ever helped you in the past, please consider helping us. bsod viewer To learn more and to read the lawsuit, click here. CONTRIBUTE TO OUR LEGAL DEFENSE All unused funds will be donated to the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF). If you accept cookies from this site, you will only be http://www.howtogeek.com/222730/how-to-find-out-why-your-windows-pc-crashed-or-froze/ shown this dialog once!You can press escape or click on the X to close this box. Register a free account to unlock additional features at BleepingComputer.com Welcome to BleepingComputer, a free community where people like yourself come together to discuss and learn how to use their computers. Using the site is easy and fun. As a guest, you can browse and view the various discussions in the forums, but can not create a new topic or http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/forums/t/576589/random-crashed-no-bsod-screensound-freezes-and-reboot-is-required/ reply to an existing one unless you are logged in. Other benefits of registering an account are subscribing to topics and forums, creating a blog, and having no ads shown anywhere on the site. Click here to Register a free account now! or read our Welcome Guide to learn how to use this site. Random crashed, no BSOD, screen/sound freezes and reboot is required Started by nomoo , May 18 2015 12:14 PM Page 1 of 3 1 2 3 Next Please log in to reply 35 replies to this topic #1 nomoo nomoo Members 15 posts OFFLINE Local time:03:18 PM Posted 18 May 2015 - 12:14 PM Hi guys, Hoping for some help to troubleshoot my newly build desktop. Specs accordingly: Intel Core i7-5820K - no overclock ASUS X99-A - with latest bios 3x 8GB Crucial DDR4 Ballistix 2400MHz DDR4 XMP PC4-19200 EVGA SuperNOVA 750 G2 PSU EVGA GeForce GTX 970 SSC ACX 2.0 Windows 8.1 The computer freezes seemingly at random, can be in-game, when surfing, working in Photoshop or Illustrator or when it just idle with nothing but the desktop open. Can't find any apparent patterns, doesn't seem to happen more frequently when stress testing or gaming, sometimes it can happen just a few minutes after windows starts and sometimes I can game for an hour or two before it happens. Th
here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers http://superuser.com/questions/129125/how-to-diagnose-a-spontaneous-reboot or posting ads with us Super User Questions Tags Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Super User is a question and answer site for computer enthusiasts and power users. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top How to diagnose a spontaneous reboot? up vote 18 down vote favorite 9 My computer reboots, seemingly completely at random, about windows 10 once every week to two weeks but has occasionally gone months. It just goes from running fine to the POST with no error messages or anything and doesn't seem to be due to heat or usage as it's happened a couple of times when the computer has booted just a few moments ago and is idling. It's been happening for as long as I've had this computer, almost two years. It's happened in both Vista and Windows7. I strongly suspect it's no error messages a hardware problem. But due to the rareish and random nature of the crashes my normal strategy of just removing hardware until the problem stops isn't really practical. My guess would be Power Supply, Ram, or Motherboard. But I just don't know how to test an issue this random and want to figure out how to confirm which it is before I go replacing things. So is there some software or hardware that can be used to test these sorts of errors? I did run memtest86 for about 8 hours without finding any issues. And the power supply is more than capable of running my system. reboot share|improve this question asked Apr 9 '10 at 8:40 Spectralist 91114 add a comment| 9 Answers 9 active oldest votes up vote 9 down vote It certainly seems like a hardware issue. The first course of action would be to test your ram. Memtest86+ is a widely used diagnostics tool for RAM. I suggest you leave it running overnight or longer and see if it reports any errors. If your RAM seems to be alright, you can try running a CPU burn-in tester to see if your processor is alright, if it doesn't produce strange faults. If that doesn't produce any errors you could try to replace your BIOS battery. I have seen examples in which an empty BIOS battery somehow made a system instable. It's also a cheap solution. My last guess would be th