12-04-2026, 01:19 PM
Blue screens with the message WHEA_UNCORRECTABLE_ERROR in Windows 10 usually point to hardware-related problems, especially CPU, RAM, storage, or drivers interacting with them. Let’s walk through the fixes step‑by‑step, starting from the simplest and safest.
Before we dive in:
Tell me if this happens randomly, during gaming, after startup, or only under heavy load. That helps narrow things down.
For now, here’s the complete fix workflow.
1. Check for overheating (very common)
WHEA errors often appear when the CPU or GPU overheats.
Try:
Make sure fans are spinning.
Clean dust from vents.
Check temps using tools like HWMonitor or CoreTemp.
If temps exceed:
CPU: 90°C
GPU: 85–90°C
→ That’s likely the cause.
2. Reset BIOS settings
Corrupt BIOS or unstable overclocking can cause WHEA.
Do this:
Restart PC
Press DEL / F2 to enter BIOS
Look for Load Optimized Defaults / Load Setup Defaults
If you’re using:
CPU overclock
RAM XMP profile
Disable temporarily and test again.
3. Update BIOS and chipset drivers
Outdated chipset or BIOS firmware can trigger WHEA errors.
Update the following:
Motherboard BIOS (from manufacturer site)
Chipset drivers (AMD or Intel)
GPU drivers (NVIDIA/AMD/Intel)
4. Test RAM (frequent cause)
Use Windows Memory Diagnostic:
Press Win + R → type mdsched.exe
Choose Restart now and check for problems
For deeper testing: use MemTest86.
If errors appear → RAM stick may be failing.
5. Check SSD/HDD health
Failing storage can cause WHEA.
Run:
text
chkdsk /f /r
Also check drive health with:
CrystalDiskInfo (look for “Caution” or “Bad”)
6. Disable “Fast Startup”
Sometimes WHEA is triggered by power initialization issues.
Steps:
Control Panel → Power Options
Choose what the power buttons do
Disable Fast Startup
7. Run System File Checker
This fixes corrupted system files.
Commands (run in admin Command Prompt):
text
sfc /scannow
DISM /online /cleanup-image /restorehealth
8. Inspect MiniDump files (if you want deeper analysis)
Windows creates logs that can show the exact failing hardware component.
If you want, attach:
The .dmp file from C:\Windows\Minidump
I can analyze it for you.
9. Hardware failures (rare but possible)
If the error persists even after all tests:
Faulty CPU (common with Ryzen unstable voltages)
Faulty motherboard VRM
Faulty RAM slot
Failing SSD/NVMe controller
To narrow things down:
Tell me:
When does the blue screen happen?
Any recent hardware changes or Windows updates?
Do you overclock CPU/GPU/RAM or use XMP?
I’ll tailor the exact fix based on your answers.
Before we dive in:
Tell me if this happens randomly, during gaming, after startup, or only under heavy load. That helps narrow things down.
For now, here’s the complete fix workflow.
1. Check for overheating (very common)
WHEA errors often appear when the CPU or GPU overheats.
Try:
Make sure fans are spinning.
Clean dust from vents.
Check temps using tools like HWMonitor or CoreTemp.
If temps exceed:
CPU: 90°C
GPU: 85–90°C
→ That’s likely the cause.
2. Reset BIOS settings
Corrupt BIOS or unstable overclocking can cause WHEA.
Do this:
Restart PC
Press DEL / F2 to enter BIOS
Look for Load Optimized Defaults / Load Setup Defaults
If you’re using:
CPU overclock
RAM XMP profile
Disable temporarily and test again.
3. Update BIOS and chipset drivers
Outdated chipset or BIOS firmware can trigger WHEA errors.
Update the following:
Motherboard BIOS (from manufacturer site)
Chipset drivers (AMD or Intel)
GPU drivers (NVIDIA/AMD/Intel)
4. Test RAM (frequent cause)
Use Windows Memory Diagnostic:
Press Win + R → type mdsched.exe
Choose Restart now and check for problems
For deeper testing: use MemTest86.
If errors appear → RAM stick may be failing.
5. Check SSD/HDD health
Failing storage can cause WHEA.
Run:
text
chkdsk /f /r
Also check drive health with:
CrystalDiskInfo (look for “Caution” or “Bad”)
6. Disable “Fast Startup”
Sometimes WHEA is triggered by power initialization issues.
Steps:
Control Panel → Power Options
Choose what the power buttons do
Disable Fast Startup
7. Run System File Checker
This fixes corrupted system files.
Commands (run in admin Command Prompt):
text
sfc /scannow
DISM /online /cleanup-image /restorehealth
8. Inspect MiniDump files (if you want deeper analysis)
Windows creates logs that can show the exact failing hardware component.
If you want, attach:
The .dmp file from C:\Windows\Minidump
I can analyze it for you.
9. Hardware failures (rare but possible)
If the error persists even after all tests:
Faulty CPU (common with Ryzen unstable voltages)
Faulty motherboard VRM
Faulty RAM slot
Failing SSD/NVMe controller
To narrow things down:
Tell me:
When does the blue screen happen?
Any recent hardware changes or Windows updates?
Do you overclock CPU/GPU/RAM or use XMP?
I’ll tailor the exact fix based on your answers.
تائید شده توسط مدیر سایت

