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Roycewicz

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    Roycewicz#3422

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  1. Yes, in fact that is actually just a stream I was watching when taking the pictures, but it's there whatever I'm doing. @BlueChinchillaEatingDorito
  2. Hello! Lately I've noticed a bunch of bright horizontal lines on my screen, most of them on the bottom, 2-3 really visible, but lot of smaller ones too (and some lighter ones on the top too). They're not dead pixels or anything like that, they're just simply lighter than they should be. Straight lines. The monitor is an LG 24M37D-B (1080p 60Hz TN panel) using a DVI cable. GPU is an R9 390, but on the TV which is connected by HDMI no bright lines can be seen. Any idea what can cause it? I've attached a bunch of pictures because it can be hard to see
  3. And the R9 390 can even mine ethereum damn good ^^
  4. might be true in some games, but not every single one. And even if so, would you pay about $300 for 20FPS? especially if it's well above 60 anyways?
  5. Maybe a little bit. Depends on game. But don't spend money on that. The main difference is the power consumption--->heat---->noise.
  6. lol no Where did that question come from? @yathis I'm Hungarian Apparently I do have an account already. And my PC remembered it, when I did not. LOL
  7. Undervolted, set up a custom fan curve, now it doesn't go over 83°C while Furmark running. Thanks for the help!
  8. Hehe, that's what I'm experimenting with right now. Thanks tho
  9. Isn't there a way to just set the software to keep it lower? Cause it could easily, from what I see, it doesn't utilize the fans correctly, let's the GPU go up to 90°C. Once I managed to push it to the limits with some benchmark, and it didn't give a damn until it hit about 95°C, then it started up to maximum cooling, and sounded like a hairdryer, but the point is that it's not going over 50% fan speed until it's too late. If only the fans would be more aggressive, and run at like 50-60% BEFORE reaching goddamn 90°C, it would be more than enough.
  10. So I have the ASUS R9 390 (https://www.asus.com/Graphics-Cards/STRIXR9390DC3OC8GD5GAMING/) It's working fine, and does the job, and doesn't actually throttle, but I believe that it's not normal, as its idle temp is about 65°C, and the fans (which are cleaned) are working fine, if I manually turn them up, they can cool down the thing like hell, but automatically, they don't. While gaming, it's just standing around 90°C. Again, no thermal throttle, and I can lower the temps easily manually, but the STRIX cooling software part seems to be letting the temp go too high. What should I do about it?
  11. It's just a theoretical question, no questions there
  12. All right! So AMD's older cards like the HD4870 for example could have been crossfired with any other HD48** cards. But the official AMD website that is supposed to show me the compatibility has not been updated since R9 200 series. What's the current situation in this topic? RX480+RX470 possible? or R9 390+RX480? or it's simply no longer true that you can crossfire different cards?
  13. Well, that's true, but I'm still saying MSI (or Sapphire if possible)
  14. What are you planning to do with the PC? for gaming 16GB with the current GPU is a waste.
  15. Pick the MSI Gaming X. I have an ASUS STRIX R9 390, and it's temps are waaaay much worse than any Gigabyte, Sapphire or MSI ones. (and my card is working fine) But if you can, get some Sapphire.
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