Motherboard or CPU issues

Greetings clever people.

i am building a computer from 2nd hand discarded parts. I have parts enough for a complete system (and a few motherboards with CPU's to spare) so i have put assembled a system specs down there *arrow pointing down*. i am running windows vista 32bit because i dont think the parts are compaitble with win7. problem is when i boot it up it goes through POST fine, and i can get into BIOS and all that, but when it loads windows i get a BSOD right after the loading bar when the windows logo is supose to show up. its is a really quick BSOD, impossible to read what it says, i have tried taking a picture with a phone but its simply to fast.

any idea why this happends?

What i have tried:
i have tried 3 different Graphics cards in the system, includeing my gtx 570 that i use in my own system, still got the BSOD at the same moment. i have tried running memtest and the ram completed 10 run throughs without any errors. i have been useing the HDD as storege in my own system so i know nothing is wrong with that part. I had been trying to get it working with another Motherboard and CPU before i installed the current Motherboard and CPU, back then i would BSOD randomly and ended up not able to do anyrhing, it froze and i could not get in it and restore the system. but now with this motherboard and CPU i cant get in at all.

PLEASE HELP

 

Specs:

antec true550P EPS12V PSU. 

Motherboard: foxconn g41mx 2.0 series with a pentium CPU. 

2 GB kingston DDR2 800Mhz RAM 1 stick. 

500GB hitachi Harddrive.

ati Radeon 3870x2 Graphic card.

 

sorry for my horrible english.. im from Denmark 

This is what you need to do, and I think it works in Vista. What's happening is your system is set to reboot upon failure, so when you boot your system up you want to hammer away on the F8 key as fast as you can. When you get the boot menu, you'll see something like "Disable automatic restart on system failure" or some such bullcrap. Select that. Then next time it blue screens it should keep the screen up so you can write down or take a picture of whatever the problem is.

I couldn't tell you off hand what may be wrong, but my suspicion is that you may have bad RAM or a flat out bad install of Windows. You might also have some settings wrong in the BIOS. Play around with the AHCI/IDE settings.

 

Good luck.

f8 f8 f8 f8 lol hes 100% right

Why don't these guys ever post back so we can determine more accurately what the problem is?