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						| tuoreJunior Member 
   | 21. February 2012 @ 09:45 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							I have upgraded my computer today and sadly it appears that it does not boot anymore.
The BIOS works fine and Windows start loading normally, but instead of showing the user selection screen, it BSODs and restarts. The BSOD is too brief for me to have time to read what it says.
 
 My old specs:
 nVidia GeForce 470
 Chieftec 650W PSU
 4GB RAM
 Asus P5B
 Intel Core 2 Duo E6600
 Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
 
 And my upgraded specs:
 Same GPU
 Same PSU
 A new 4GB Kingston RAM stick (DDR3 because of the mobo)
 Asus P67-M motherboard
 Intel i5-2500k
 Same OS
 
 The hardware is compatible. I suspect this to be a problem with BIOS, but reverting to defaults doesn't help, nor does removing and reattaching the mobo battery. I double-checked all cables, too.
 The HDD with the OS is fine and works on another computer.
 
 I'm running out of ideas. Suggestions?
 This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 21. February 2012 @ 09:58 | 
				
				
			
				
				
				
					
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						| badmanvanJunior Member 
 3 product reviews
 
   | 21. February 2012 @ 10:10 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							BSOD will mainly relate to hardware issues, though it can be software related as well...
 I would start with the Hardware first, r u sure the hardware is capable of running Win 7 64bit?
 
 Did u re-install the OS after the new hardware? if yes any errors etc prior...
 
 Check the connecting hardware connections internally....even the PSU incorrectly or not securely seated could cause issues, RAM seated ok? Fans working??
 
 
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						| tuoreJunior Member 
   | 21. February 2012 @ 10:16 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							Originally posted by badmanvan:Well, my old build was able to handle 64-bit, I don't see why this new and better one wouldn't. I didn't reinstall the OS. Internal connections I have checked multiple times, they are fine. All fans work properly.BSOD will mainly relate to hardware issues, though it can be software related as well...
 
 I would start with the Hardware first, r u sure the hardware is capable of running Win 7 64bit?
 
 Did u re-install the OS after the new hardware? if yes any errors etc prior...
 
 Check the connecting hardware connections internally....even the PSU incorrectly or not securely seated could cause issues, RAM seated ok? Fans working??
 
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						| Jeffrey_PSenior Member 
   | 21. February 2012 @ 11:10 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							Originally posted by tuore:Is it a fresh win7 installation? If not there may be a problem with incompatible drivers and such.I have upgraded my computer today and sadly it appears that it does not boot anymore.
 The BIOS works fine and Windows start loading normally, but instead of showing the user selection screen, it BSODs and restarts. The BSOD is too brief for me to have time to read what it says.
 
 My old specs:
 nVidia GeForce 470
 Chieftec 650W PSU
 4GB RAM
 Asus P5B
 Intel Core 2 Duo E6600
 Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
 
 And my upgraded specs:
 Same GPU
 Same PSU
 A new 4GB Kingston RAM stick (DDR3 because of the mobo)
 Asus P67-M motherboard
 Intel i5-2500k
 Same OS
 
 The hardware is compatible. I suspect this to be a problem with BIOS, but reverting to defaults doesn't help, nor does removing and reattaching the mobo battery. I double-checked all cables, too.
 The HDD with the OS is fine and works on another computer.
 
 I'm running out of ideas. Suggestions?
 
 
 Have you tried booting in Safe Mode?
 
 Jeff
 
 
 Cars, Guitars & Radiation. This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 21. February 2012 @ 11:13 | 
				
				
			
				
				
				
				
				
					
						| scorpNZAfterDawn Addict 
 4 product reviews
 
   | 21. February 2012 @ 11:38 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							your wasting other peoples time & yours until you reinstall win 7,where on earth did you get the idea you didn't need to reinstall win 7 when differential hardware was installled
 edit: in safemode select disable auto restart
 
 run a 64bit version of linux from cd,this will bypass hdd,if linux runs fine it will tell you hardware is working ok & is connected ok,which will leave hdd as to where issue lies my first comment stands you still need to reinstall win 7 regardless
 
 
 
 
 This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 21. February 2012 @ 11:53 | 
				
				
			
				
				
				
				
				
					
						| Jeffrey_PSenior Member 
   | 21. February 2012 @ 11:55 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							Originally posted by scorpNZ:Sysprep worked fairly well with XP. I haven't looked into Win7 compatible version.your wasting other peoples time & yours until you reinstall win 7,where on earth did you get the idea you didn't need to reinstall win 7 when differential hardware was installled
 
 edit: in safemode select disable auto restart
 
 run a 64bit version of linux from cd,this will bypass hdd,if linux runs fine it will tell you hardware is working ok & is connected ok,which will leave hdd as to where issue lies my first comment stands you still need to reinstall win 7 regardless
 
 
 
 
 I was trying to let him figure things out for himself.
 
 Jeff
 
 
 Cars, Guitars & Radiation. | 
				
				
			
				
				
				
				
				
					
						| scorpNZAfterDawn Addict 
 4 product reviews
 
   | 21. February 2012 @ 12:47 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							lol..@ win 7 compatible version
op needs to read up a bit more on how BIOS works & why OS reinstall is required on hardware change of such magnitude
 
 
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						| ddpModerator 
   | 21. February 2012 @ 14:41 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							if new motherboard is different from old board then windows has to be fresh installed or it will barf, that is why you are getting the bsod.
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						| smoggie66Member 
   | 21. February 2012 @ 17:21 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							could posibly be the ram is it  1 x 4gb  stick or 2x 2gb dual channel but you should do clean install to rule out any bottle necks in system
 This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 21. February 2012 @ 17:24 | 
				
				
			
				
				
				
				
				
					
						| ddpModerator 
   | 21. February 2012 @ 19:34 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							smoggie66, unlikely to cause bsod.
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						| smoggie66Member 
   | 22. February 2012 @ 09:01 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							memtest should prove me wrong but iam wondering if he has latest bios for mobo, and has correct ram timings,my 1155 chipset is very temprementel with memory if only using 1 stick as to using 2x matching pairs. iam also wondering if he has it overclocked and mem voltage is correct asus  do recommend 1.5v mem.
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						| Jeffrey_PSenior Member 
   | 22. February 2012 @ 09:21 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							Originally posted by smoggie66:He is trying to run the same Win 7 installation on two completely different motherboads with different chipsets. The chances of it working that way are slim to none. The BSOD's are common when somebody tries to do things that way.memtest should prove me wrong but iam wondering if he has latest bios for mobo, and has correct ram timings,my 1155 chipset is very temprementel with memory if only using 1 stick as to using 2x matching pairs. iam also wondering if he has it overclocked and mem voltage is correct asus  do recommend 1.5v mem.
 
 
 Jeff
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						| Senior Member 
   | 23. February 2012 @ 04:17 |  Link to this message   | 
					
					
					
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							yes I would definately say total reinstall will solve the problem. and win7 ultimate is not the o/s i would reccomend unless it's a business, us gamers are all on home prem 64 bit
 
 i7 3770 12GB ram terrabyte sata drive 1 750Gb sata drive  285GTX graphics Sony dvdwriter  same NZXT Nemesis case 
Still playing Black Hawk Down why did I upgrade?
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