I ran the built in diagnostics, which came back fine. No problems in device manager, and the time and regularity of the crashes are inconsistent.TimG wrote: ↑Sun Aug 23, 2020 9:10 am DougLorenz: Does Reliability History give you any info ? You can click on previous days and it gives you the errors from that day. You can then double click on each event to see what it is about.
Other than that, as as been said before, it's likely to be drivers or hardware. You just have to rule them out one by one. For example:
1. If it freezes once a day, and you suspect overheating, take the side off the pc and leave a fan blowing air into it. Did that change the time to the crash ?
2. Are there any exclamation marks in "Device Manager" ?
3. Does this pc have built in diagnostics at BIOS level ? If so, run them all.
Please note that if you think I am trying to teach you to suck eggs, it is only because I am trying to help you, but I don't know how techy you are !
I have used software such as Sisoft Sandra to do burn-in tests on faulty pc's, but if you use that, be aware that it can finish off a failing pc. Reliability History, if it can help, is a very low risk, and easy way to see what is happening to your pc.
As they used to tell Sparky Tim down t'pit "If you can't fix it with a hammer, it's an electrical problem.". Such wise words![]()
I'm good with the extended details in your suggestions. I used to be a computer tech many years ago, and I understand the stuff well, but there are always things that can be learned. I didn't know about windows 10's "Reliability History", but probably should have. Additionally, this is all being saved on this discussion forum for other people, so might as well write for a more inclusive audience anyway.
I think I might look into Sisoft Sandra. If a burn in test is capable of smoking my Blue Iris system, then I'd expect that just running Blue Iris on that computer 24/7 would kill it in a few months anyway... I'd prefer to know.