- If you need clarification, ask it in the comment box above.
- Better answers use proper spelling and grammar.
- Provide details, support with references or personal experience.
Tell us some more! Your answer needs to include more details to help people.You can't post answers that contain an email address.Please enter a valid email address.The email address entered is already associated to an account.Login to postPlease use English characters only.
Tip: The max point reward for answering a question is 15.
MHH AUTO
https://mhhauto.com > Thread-ACTROS-GS-19
Apr 7, 2019 - It means that transmission out shaft is spinning...it must be stopped all time of learning. Now, if your vehicle is lifted, 1 wheel is spinning, ...
go google and type in --- fault codes for 1993 cadillac seville--
the first site is cadillac OBD codes -- and if you click on that site you will find a page cadillac pages
page 2 in the middle column there is a section cadillac seville 1993-1995 4.6 L at the bottom of that column
click on it and the fault codes appear
if you right click on the screen , a print section should appear and you can take a snapshot of the screen and any screen page after that so that you can get a hard copy of the fault codes
1. Processes are created by memory mapping the code sections from the
file. Reading sections of a memory mapped file that aren't yet in memory
causes page faults, so each process will at least have the page faults
of reading in its own executable and any DLLs
whose code wasn't yet in memory. Other memory mapped files used by a
process will also cause page faults.
2. When a process requests memory with VirtualAlloc, no physical frames
are actually committed to the process until the allocated pages are
'touched' for the first time. This also causes page faults.
3. Even when memory is not full, Windows will trim infrequently used
pages from the process' working set and lazily page them out to disk.
This enables Windows to better respond to sudden demands for large
amounts of memory. When a process attempts to access
such a page, it causes a page fault. In situations where memory
consumption is low enough, the page will probably still be in memory so
no disk read is necessary, but a page fault is still triggered. This is
called a soft page fault.
There's probably more reasons but these are the first to come to mind.
Good chances are, you have a bad memory stick. If you have 2 memory sticks installed, take one out. If it still does it, put that memory stick back in and pull out the other one. If you're still having problems, you might have to reinstall windows.
×