BSOD 0x0000007F 0x000000D

Hi all!

I recently bought a new pc, specs:

Intel® Core™ 2 Quad Q9550 (Boxed, FC-LGA4, "Yorkfield")
MSI P43 Neo-F (Retail, Gb-LAN, Sound, ATX)
XFX GF9800GTX+ 775M XXX (Retail, 2x DVI-I, HDMI, SLI)
Microsoft Windows XP Home (SystemBuilder, SP3)

Since the start i often get a BSOD with error code:

0x0000007F 0x000000D and then 0x0000000

I looked at aumha.org/a/stop.htm[for this code, but it still doesn't get me anywhere. So i downloaded the Windows Debugger Tool and the Symbols pack for XP SP3, but I still can't read my minidump.

I attached the minidump with the post, is it possible someone takes a look at it?

Thanks in advance!

Jeff
 
Minidump 112308-02
BUGCHECK_STR: 0x24
Probably caused by : memory_corruption


Cause
One possible cause of this bug check is disk corruption. Corruption in the NTFS file system or bad blocks (sectors) on the hard disk can induce this error. Corrupted SCSI and IDE drivers can also adversely affect the system's ability to read and write to disk, thus causing the error.

Possible solution
To resolve a disk corruption problem: Check Event Viewer for error messages from SCSI and FASTFAT (System Log) or Autochk (Application Log) that might help pinpoint the device or driver that is causing the error.

You should also run hardware diagnostics supplied by the system manufacturer. For details on these procedures, see the owner's manual for your computer. Run Chkdsk /f /r to detect and resolve any file system structural corruption. You must restart the system before the disk scan begins on a system partition

How to run chkdsk

Click start--->run--->type cmd then click OK or press enter.

At the command prompt, type the drive letter of the drive you want to check (followed by a colon), and then press Enter. For example, to check drive D, type the following text: d:

Change to the root directory of the drive by typing the following text and pressing Enter: cd\

Type the following text, and then press Enter: chkdsk /f /r

If you are prompted to schedule CHKDSK to run the next time the computer restarts (because CHKDSK may be unable to gain exclusive access to the drive under Windows), type Y then press Enter

At the command prompt, type the following text exit, and then press Enter:

If you had to schedule the CHKDSK operation, then restart Windows NT/2000/XP.
While Windows is loading, CHKDSK should automatically run and check the drive that you specified earlier.

You will also want to check your manufacturers website for updated drivers for your motherboard and hardware.

Also after you do the chkdsk you may want to check your RAM by downloading memtest from www.memtest.com Get the ISO version and burn it to a CD then with the cd in the drive restart your computer and make sure it is set to boot from the CD drive first and let memtest run for a minimum of 7 passes..Note: there are several tests performed per pass

After doing the above stated please post back and let us know the results and if the problem has been resolved or not.
 
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