Greetings @Shunyakaruna ,
Can you make sure that you don't have any overclocked hardware? f you have any hardware that came factory overclocked then return the clock speed to the default setting. Please refer to the manufacturer for the default clock speed.
At a rough guess, I'd say it was the new motherboard. Did you install it yourself, or have it done professionally? All heat sinks properly done? Heve you monitored temperatures? Is the new motherboard 100% compatible with the rest of your system? Is it properly seated and everything properly secured to it?
However, the other possibility is that when you fried the old motherboard it wasn't the only thing to be damaged. What about the other components, like memory sticks, graphics card, PSU etc?
rayeab16_ESO wrote: »also, and this might sound daft....
did you do a full clean install of your operating system and the new drivers when you swapped out your mainboard?
leaving any drivers in the background of your OS can casue a lot of those types of crashes.
unless your mainboard matched exactly, its more likely to casue BsoD and similar. i know because i have had to whipe many, many PCs over the years when we upgrade them at work.
most times its safer and easier to just start from scratch. the only times we dont, is when we ether use the hdd as a seccondary, or replace the board with same make and nearly same model.
*looks at mainboard types*
yeah, if you swap a gigabyte for another gigabyte, you usualy have it fine, but swaping an MSI for a gigabyte might be old drivers lurking in the system.
if the crashes persist, it might be worth a whipe and reinstall.
Questions:
- Before you put the new motherboard in, did you check if it was compatible with your cpu?
- Someone else asked if you installed the heat sink properly but you didn't actually respond to this. Did you use thermal paste? Are you using a new CPU also? How did you get everything apart earlier? Did it just come apart easily or did you have to yank on it?