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Windows Silent BSOD/Bugcheck Error (Code 133, Code 141)

Anonymous
2020-11-17T13:11:24+00:00

For some reason I have been enduring issues with Windows and/or my computer crashing randomly; according to the reliability error, I am receiving a number of errors that I have listed below:

Error Code 133 - Windows Shut Down Unexpectedly, BlueScreen

Error Code 141 - Hardware Error, LiveKernelEvent

Windows Rebooted from a Bugcheck: Report ID: e970fd59-e8e4-4a31-bbc2-723ebce1fb7a

I've been having these random reboots for almost a year now, and they've been getting more numerous as the months roll on; I do not know how to resolve the issue at this point. If necessary I do have a .DMP file prepared, however looking at it, it's over 1GB large.

Kind Regards,

Burin077

Windows for home | Windows 10 | Performance and system failures

Locked Question. This question was migrated from the Microsoft Support Community. You can vote on whether it's helpful, but you can't add comments or replies or follow the question.

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  1. Anonymous
    2020-11-22T00:23:23+00:00

    Hi, I was searching for some help with error 141, but saw your Code 43 problem. If you are determined to force the old driver to work, there has been issued a Code 43 fixing script in the egpu (external GPU) community. Just google it together with the egpu part and you will find it.

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  2. Anonymous
    2020-11-17T14:57:14+00:00

    Alright, I'll give it a try and see what happens.

    Thank you for your help!

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  3. DaveM121 891.6K Reputation points Independent Advisor
    2020-11-17T13:49:10+00:00

    Hi Burin077

    Your minidump files indicate it is the device driver (nvlddmkm.sys) on your Nvidia graphics card that is causing your system crashes

    If that driver has already been updated, then perhaps an older version of that driver may be more compatible with your system . . .

    1

    Open Device Manager (accessible by right clicking your Start Button)

    Expand the Display Adapters Section

    Right click your video card and choose Properties

    On the Driver Tab, choose 'Roll back Driver'

    Restart your PC once done . . .

    2

    If that option is not available or does not resolve the issue, go to the support page for your device on the manufacturers website, then download and install the video driver they recommend, it may well be an older version to the one you are currently running

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  4. Anonymous
    2020-11-17T13:32:50+00:00

    Good morning;

    I have uploaded the minidump files to the following location:

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/13SsveI2iiuYr8UPSnSerRpznS4ADC7B6/view?usp=sharing

    Hopefully this works.

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  5. DaveM121 891.6K Reputation points Independent Advisor
    2020-11-17T13:20:32+00:00

    Hi Burin077

    I am Dave, an Independent Advisor, I will help you with this . . .

    Rather than uploading that large Memory.dmp file, please check if your system is producing Minidump files and upload those:

    Open Windows File Explorer

    Navigate to C:\Windows\Minidump

    Copy any minidump files onto your Desktop, then zip those up

    Upload the zip file to the Cloud (OneDrive, DropBox . . . etc.), then choose to share those and get a share link

    Then post the link here to the zip file, so we can take a look for you . . .

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