It could be RAM as well. At my old internship one of the computers was BSODing (different from yours) daily and it was due to bad RAM. It'd be fairly easy to remove a stick or two and see if one of them is causing it.
It doesn't sound like a software issue considering you've tried a fresh install of Windows. If you wanted to confirm that you could try sticking Ubuntu on a USB drive then testing an application that makes use of 3D such as a unity browser game or something of the sort. I would suggest removing every non-essential device…
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813131817 If this is your motherboard, then, probably it's a diffuse problem. Another thing you can try is, as Beefaroni suggested, is to the test the RAM modules for a faulty one, problem is that your motherboard is quad channel, so to work it needs at least four…
Well, the description said quad channel, 2 sticks per CPU, but if it boots with only one RAM module, you can check one by one if they work correctly. If you read the comments on the newegg link, there are a lot of costumers complaining about defective motherboards and BSOD when they actually work. I'm not saying that your…
Hey guys, really needs help with this Im having really hard time with my pc lately, i get crashes all the time mostly with using 3D softwares or games I have a workstation based pc Board - Asus z9-PED8-WS Memory - Corsair XMS3 48gb Gigabyte GTX 780 - (today i about ANOTHER 780 cause i couldnt figure out what the problem…
Some shots in the dark here: Did you try disconnecting every USB device and boot only with mouse and keyboard (preferably a different set of both and plugged into previously unused USB ports). The PS2 suggestion from SonicBlue also sounds good. Can you temporarily disable one of the CPUs in BIOS and see if that helps? If…