BSOD playing "Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six® Siege" 0x00000133


  1. Posts : 5
    windows10
       #1

    BSOD playing "Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six® Siege" 0x00000133


    CPU: I7-6700
    GPU: MSI 1070 GAMEING X
    RAM: Micron DDR4 2400 8G*2
    PSU: Delta 650W
    Z170 KRAIT GAMING
    SSD: SanDisk Extreme PRO SSD 240G
    HDD: toshiba DT01ACA200
    WIN10 X64

    I have uninstalled and reinstalled the drivers.There is the dmp file. When i playing Rainbow Six and watching youtube it will happen.

    English is not my native language.
    Thank you for your help.
    Attachment 114372Attachment 114373

    here is the file thank you!
    Attachment 114435
    Last edited by soga5478; 21 Dec 2016 at 22:27.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 654
    windows 10 Pro
       #2

    Please use the BSOD posting instruction to provide the Dumpfile BSOD - Posting Instructions - Windows 10 Forums
    And fill in your System Specs.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 5
    windows10
    Thread Starter
       #3

    lifetec said:
    Please use the BSOD posting instruction to provide the Dumpfile BSOD - Posting Instructions - Windows 10 Forums
    And fill in your System Specs.
    I already post the file.Is that right?
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 545
    seL4
       #4

    The dump files are showing that nvlddmkm.sys is causing the BSODs, this is Nvidia's graphics driver. Please make sure you are running the most current Nvidia display driver.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 5
    windows10
    Thread Starter
       #5

    Spectrum said:
    The dump files are showing that nvlddmkm.sys is causing the BSODs, this is Nvidia's graphics driver. Please make sure you are running the most current Nvidia display driver.
    I already checked it.but still happened.
    Last edited by soga5478; 22 Dec 2016 at 20:52.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 545
    seL4
       #6

    Soga,
    Have you already performed a clean installation, by using DDU to uninstall the nvidia driver, rebooting, and the installing the latest driver?

    If so, try rolling back to a previous release.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 5
    windows10
    Thread Starter
       #7

    Spectrum said:
    Soga,
    Have you already performed a clean installation, by using DDU to uninstall the nvidia driver, rebooting, and the installing the latest driver?

    If so, try rolling back to a previous release.
    I already reformat my computer and install the latest nvidia driver,but it's still not work.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 545
    seL4
       #8

    Please post the new log/dump files if you are still experiencing crashes.
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 5
    windows10
    Thread Starter
       #9

    Spectrum said:
    Please post the new log/dump files if you are still experiencing crashes.
    Attachment 114530
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 654
    windows 10 Pro
       #10

    It blames again the nvdia driver.

    Are you overclocking your GPUcard?
    What are the temperatures of your card and your system.

    Possibilities.
    Rollback your drivers to a older version.

    Test your GPUcard.
    Videotest Furmark
    To test your GPU you can use Furmark see this tutorial FurMark - GPU Stress Test - Windows 10 Tutorials
    FurMark download site: FurMark: VGA Stress Test, Graphics Card and GPU Stability Test, Burn-in Test, OpenGL Benchmark and GPU Temperature | oZone3D.Net
    FurMark Setup:
    - If you have more than one GPU, select Multi-GPU during setup
    - In the Run mode box, select "Stability Test" and "Log GPU Temperature"
    Click "Go" to start the test (Looks like it's "BURN-IN test" now)
    - Run the test until the GPU temperature maxes out - or until you start having problems (whichever comes first).
    NOTE: Set the alarm to go off at 90ºC. Then watch the system from that point on. If the system doesn't display a temperature, watch it constantly and turn it off at the first sign of video problems. DO NOT leave it it unmonitored, it can DAMAGE your video card!!!
    If the temperature gets above 100ºC, quit the test - the video card is overheating.
    - Click "Quit" to exit

    What you are looking for:
    - excessive heat from the GPU (report back with anything over 90ºC)
    - problems with the video display (picture is distorted or jumbled, picture turns black, etc)
    - problems reported by the program (I haven't seen this, but "just in case")
      My Computer


 

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