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Computer Randomly Shutting Down At Night


Knightmare

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This has happened once about a month ago and I just thought it was a random power outage. But then I noticed that the computer RESTARTED, which if a power outage had shut off my computer, it wouldn't have restarted it. So about a month has gone by and I've been shutting down my computer regularly at night. The past few nights I have left it on with no problems, but last night it did the random shutdown. I've looked in Event Viewer but nothing gives me anything that I can read. It just tells me that the computer had to turn off at a certain time without cleanly shutting down. The only code I found was 0x80000000000000.

- <Event xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/win/2004/08/events/event">- <System>  <Provider Name="EventLog" />   <EventID Qualifiers="32768">6008</EventID>   <Level>2</Level>   <Task>0</Task>   <Keywords>0x80000000000000</Keywords>   <TimeCreated SystemTime="2014-08-22T05:16:32.000000000Z" />   <EventRecordID>132867</EventRecordID>   <Channel>System</Channel>   <Computer>[computer name]</Computer>   <Security />   </System>- <EventData>  <Data>1:14:39 AM</Data>   <Data>‎8/‎22/‎2014</Data>   <Data />   <Data />   <Data>15186</Data>   <Data />   <Data />   <Binary>DE0708000500160001000E0027006803DE0708000500160005000E0027006803600900003C000000010000006009000000000000B00400000100000000000000</Binary>   </EventData>  </Event>
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Seems a bad nightmare!

I had this issue with my old desktop and the reason for that was a virus. You should scan your PC for virus if you are not 100% sure that you are infection free.

If virus isn't the reason for that, then you may check thermal conditions of the components. Check if the fans and other necessary components are fine. RAM can cause this too.

If everything fails, you can try dis-assembling and re-assembling all the components and apply new thermal paste if it's too old.

Good Luck!

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Seems a bad nightmare!

I had this issue with my old desktop and the reason for that was a virus. You should scan your PC for virus if you are not 100% sure that you are infection free.

If virus isn't the reason for that, then you may check thermal conditions of the components. Check if the fans and other necessary components are fine. RAM can cause this too.

If everything fails, you can try dis-assembling and re-assembling all the components and apply new thermal paste if it's too old.

Good Luck!

I'm sure it's not a virus. I just installed the CPU this year but I don't think it's a problem with it overheating because its temperature doesn't seem to change much--it's usually at 40-42 C. That leaves the RAM. I've often wonder if the RAM I recently bought is good or not. It does meet the maximum requirements for my other components, but my system didn't seem any different even though I doubled the RAM.

Attached is a report that collected all of my Event Logs and minidumps. This tool was recommended at Seven Forums to a user receiving the same error.

System Diag Report.zip

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there r couple reason that can cause this ^^

so can u bee more specific ?

Unfortunately, I cannot because it happened while I was sleeping. That's why I posted the diagnostic logs; I was hoping that someone could help me read exactly what caused the shutdown.

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If you're on Win7/Win8 use the memory testing tool provided by msft. Otherwise, dl it (http://pcsupport.about.com/od/toolsofthetrade/gr/windows-memory-diagnostic.htm) or something like that and let it run in it's aggressive mode for a day.

I've seen more bad memory lately (DDR3) than in years - maybe a trend or maybe coincidence, still - test it for 24 hours.

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first things first

if i was u i would reinstall my os + install only the stable drivers and see the result if this didnt help then we can be sure that its a hardware problem @@

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I know it's hard to handle but I would install Comodo firewall. It's HIPS is something that can detect (and stop) software from restarting your pc and an extra layer of security isn't bad at all.

Yeah, It's nightmarish to set it up completely, but when done, it really helps.

But first of all, do a ram test using something like memtest86+ (with two passes it's more than enough), not what M$ offers. I'm not so sure if it's hardware related because it happens when idle, it can be a faulty driver (video is my guess) or your BIOS' configuration is not right (memory parameters/voltage, cpu parameters/voltage/base clock speed, overclock, etc.), since you have changed hardware.

Good Luck!

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bro this happens bcoz of voltage fluctuations

the only solution to it call the electrician and check the board from where ur pc is getting supply

and if it doesn't solve ur problem then the last solution is replace the capacitors of the smps with heavy one

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Hi Knightmare,

did you have resolve your issue?

I saw that you have 2 suspected program on startup and also in your running application you have 3 strange application:

and last, I saw that you have an nvidia card ge force gts 450, maybe this had a lot of consumption, the shutdown may be the power supply that can't supply all the power (many time have, less resist to power stress)

just this for first impression,

thanks for your attention

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Hi Knightmare,

did you have resolve your issue?

I saw that you have 2 suspected program on startup and also in your running application you have 3 strange application:

and last, I saw that you have an nvidia card ge force gts 450, maybe this had a lot of consumption, the shutdown may be the power supply that can't supply all the power (many time have, less resist to power stress)

just this for first impression,

thanks for your attention

if it is the power supply then the pc should shutdown wile running high performance softs (games for EXP)

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Hi Knightmare,

did you have resolve your issue?

I saw that you have 2 suspected program on startup and also in your running application you have 3 strange application:

and last, I saw that you have an nvidia card ge force gts 450, maybe this had a lot of consumption, the shutdown may be the power supply that can't supply all the power (many time have, less resist to power stress)

just this for first impression,

thanks for your attention

Not sure if I fixed the problem or not. The computer didn't shutdown last night, but maybe I just got lucky. One of the sites that I went to said that ESET and Malwarebytes' tend to conflict with one another, so I turned off Malwarebytes' to see if that helps. The programs that you have highlighted are for Java, Free Download Manager, and my mouse driver, so they aren't suspicious.

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@Knightmare

I hope you report the result later and tell us if you solved you problem or not :)

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Problem seems to be solved. I'm going to leave it on all this week and see what happens.

Great!!! I'm very happy for you ...but, what was the problem?!? ^_^

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Problem seems to be solved. I'm going to leave it on all this week and see what happens.

Great!!! I'm very happy for you ...but, what was the problem?!? ^_^

I really think it was a conflict with the Self-Protection Module in Malwarebytes' and how it works with ESET.

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