The explanation is actually pretty simple. As the CPU heats up, its transistors loose the capability to open and close, thus generating incorrect signals. However, modern CPUs are quite good at taking the heat.
well, recently I do it twice a week maybe and every time new bad clusters are found, missed last time.
According to backup - I dont have any vital info on HDD, if I have I get it on my pendrives, so it is just annoying to take so much time to get PC running for mostly communication purpose. Having 2 firewalls and 3 antivirus not finding anything wrong I wont put more effort to make it running. I doubt it would help.
You might be right, I thought temperature safety threshold is much lower before this starts to happen but I can't check it now to be sure (I mean I have never seen this behavior when CPU was overheating and even couldn't find article/video/graph, it is much clearly visible when GPU is overheating though)...
If chkdsk finds bad clusters every time you run it, it's a clear sign that your HDD is about to say goodbye. The bright side is that you can get a new one relatively cheap.
Last time I run chkdsk after unexpected reboot it said NTFS is ok.
And because it happened when I tried to deinstall Adobe Reader I thought I do it manually and remove all the Acrobat entries from registry. So I started to make registry backup and it rebooted my PC. So I tried root by root to find out the place... well it reboots when saving HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software (saved as .txt instead of .reg) and HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-2000478354-1645522239-725345543-1003 but strangely on different entries - well I dont know then: more registry is saved second time than first prolly HDD
And one more question - PC reboots everytime I try to check, find, open entries in root HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE in areas of applications from M (after Microsoft ) to W. The same goes in HKEY_USERS\this long code name\SOFTWARE in the same areas for he same applications. Question is - is this the same part of registry (according to HDD) or different?
windows registry are basically files stored in windows\system32\config....those files there are your registry.
Default – HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT
Sam – HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SAM
Security – HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SECURITY
Software – HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE
System – HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM
one more question - what would you point out as reason of sudden shutdown (black screen-reboot) on opening of a specific file? A HDD hardware problem or a command like tsshutdn /reboot?
those charts are just pictures windows generates based on theories of what they consider use, it's not really indicative of real use... (any process manager has this flaw, for any operating system)
okay, how about this then... install a sensors program like hmonitor, and get a copy of superpi. run it. does the machine crash?