Oh my the latest Nvidia drivers are awesome so far. Have some more testing to do but I can see a difference, there are actual improvements this time. XD
i965 could easily do 400MHZ so I would guess a G41 can. Intel list voltage as
0.8500V-V1.3625.
uhh, is it safe to keep the VCCIN for an i5 4670k at 1.4V? Stock was 1.8V and it seems to run pretty stable with 1.460V. Temps have also lowered a lot with that.
Just leave it alone. It's not something you should be touching.
Seit to Vcore + 0,4V, that was recommend on a guide I found.
Blech hot day and can't keep my cpu under 45 to 50 celsius idle, it's 85 indoors and I have the AC running and a fan. :/
Right, so I got another BSOD. Like NV asked, I wrote down all the relevant info displayed. Interestingly enough, my PC did not automatically reboot after the crash, unlike it usually does, so I had all the time I needed to write everything down.
After the usual line of windows encountering an error and shutting down to prevent damage, the next line specified that it was an "uncorrectable hardware error". Then came the usual instructions of rebooting if it was the first occurrence, and if not asking to check if all programs were installed correctly, etc., etc. After that came the following info:
"***STOP: 0x00000124 (0x0<16 bits of 0s>, 0xFFFFFA800F18B028, 0x0...<bunch of zeroes with BE in the middle>, 0x00<more 0s>100110A)"
The stuff in <> is obviously my addition, and the quotes are also mine. Then came reports of dumping, apparently dump file size was too small so it switched to minidump, which was successful.
Does this help in any way, NV?
Typically 0x00000124 means that you need to add more voltage to your CPU. Up it a bit and stress test.
@Garteal: Even at stock settings? Well, I might try.
@NV: Because PCs were made to be broken

Also, I feel stupid for not doing that myself, especially since that's what I usually do. BUT, looking through the link you posted, I can immediately rule out cooling, overclocking or driver issues: I always keep my drivers up to date, and as I mentioned earlier the BSODs still happen even without my (pretty puny 4.0GHz) OC.
If the error is really in my installation of Windows, I'm honestly never going to be bothered to reinstall it - I can live with a BSOD or two per month.
The only thing that remains is to stress test my RAM. If there are no errors, then it's either the motherboard or my software. Is there any way to stress test a motherboard, or at least those components of it most likely to cause such an error?