11-27-2018 08:10 AM
Afternoon,
Please excuse the vagueness of some of this, but I'm not the person that actually uses the machine this is about. I work in the IT department and the person that used to look after all this is no longer here. So they have come to me.
I have a Windows XP laptop that is connected to an LGCM 014-LG-TE-2000 calibration machine, there is a program that was created in LabView 7.1, that is used for testing and calibrating pieces. The program has three voltage settings, 5V, 9V and 28V. The 5 and 9 volt buttons work fine and when pressed turn on the light on the calibration machine, but when the 28V button is pressed we get a BSOD, attached picture 1.
Everything I've read indicates a driver issue, so I have downloaded NIDAQ 7.4 and NIDAQ 8.3 and ran repairs on all the installed parts that I can.
I have also included a kernel memory dump. if anyone can advise on what can be done then I would greatly appreciate it.
Thanks
David Kernaghan
11-30-2018 02:38 AM
Hi David,
Thanks for your post.
I'd like to ask you to try a few steps:
Creating a MAX Technical Report to Document Configuration Information
https://knowledge.ni.com/KnowledgeArticleDetails?id=kA00Z000000P9mPSAS&l=en-GB#
Thanks,
Kind regards
YD
11-30-2018 04:31 AM
Morning,
Thank you for the respsonse.
We do have another machine that we tested the program on, we plugged in the device and restarted and it seemed ok, until we hit the 28V switch and it blue screened, same as the other laptop, which I suppose it more indicative of a hardware fault.
We are still using LabVIEW 7.1 on Windows XP. I upgraded the NIDAQmx drivers from 8.3 to 8.7.1 with the same result.
I've attached the MAX report as requested.