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helfisk

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  1. You could try disabling the hardware power and reset buttons, in case they are somehow short circuiting - it's a stretch, but it's easy and 0 cost to verify
  2. It is, without a doubt - I'm not that knowledgeable in PSU's, but I do know that the PCI rails, and the quality of the power they are able to provide a GPU under load, is essential for stability. According to this: PSU Tier List - Power Supplies - Linus Tech Tips - you should be fine though. Don't know if it is relevant in your case, but can you check and make sure that both PCI power cables are connected to separate PCI power outlets on your PSU? Could be that daisy chaining is drawing too much power from one outlet or cables are too thin for that power draw.
  3. Well this might be a coincidence, malfunctioning driver, bad update from microsoft - even antivirus have been known to cause BSOD's. 65c is very reasonable under load - too reasonable perhaps! Depending on what load of course. If you could locate someone else with the same GPU and compare temps, that could be helpful - maybe it is not performing at 100% - could be you are on to something regarding the power delivery / PSU. It looks like a beefy cooler, but 65c under full load is very good
  4. Ah - perfect, the 71c CPU temp had me worried if idle
  5. I would say so - Never heard of artifacting due to other hardware. If memory serves, artifacting is usually caused by VRAM getting too hot. If it was my card and weren't covered by warranty, I'd investigate thermal pad thickness, best thermal pads available, order that and some a tube of some good thermal paste. Disassemble the card and replace all thermal pad and compound. However, this will not solve the issue if it is caused by bad physical defects on the PSU. It also won't solve the issue (might improve it though) if the case isn't supplying sufficient fresh air (this could explain why Asus was unable to reproduce the issue)
  6. Might be a good idea if you live in an area with unstable and/or fluctuating power delivery? Otherwise, you might as well return that and get a refund. I don't see anything in your hardware specs, that might suggest the PSU isn't enough, but obviously we cannot rule out PSU issues or issues related to power delivery. Honestly, there's not much to go on, so I'm grasping at straws here. So, in lack of a better plan, try updating the bios to latest version. Once updated, enter the bios and reset it - do not enable any XMP profile or anything. Make sure you are running with default values through and through. If that seems to solve the issue, you can re-enable all custom settings, if issue reappears, disable/reset settings one by one until the issue stops
  7. Well, to some extend - but it also means 2 devices can communicate directly through the AP at higher speeds, so it can be an indicator of how multiple devices will perform
  8. I assume those are while idle? What CPU cooler do you have?
  9. I don't think there's any temperature sensor on the back / memory modules. What about opening the side panel and place a case fan, configured to its highest rpm (if pwm controlled) and place it somewhere, where it blows directly on the back of your gpu?
  10. I think most nvidia gpu's reach 81c before ramping up their fans, continuously until equilibrium - so unless you hear the gpu fans ramping up significantly (you'll know) I think those temps are fine. But that still doesn't rule out the GPU memory on the back side of the PCB. Do you have some way to add additional cooling to the back of your GPU - just temporarily to rule it out. A normal desk fan blowing air into the case's removed side panel should do the trick nicely.
  11. It is for everyone, IMO. I'm fairly technical, but never cared enough to learn much about networking (natting, submasking etc). Primary issue is that the "extremely" low budget offerings, are muddying the waters, making it hard for someone who doesn't understand it, to justify purchasing a >$150 router paired with a >$100 switch instead of a $50 all-in-one that does nothing well Personally, I run edgerouter with AP from ubiquity - but those are a nightmare to configure compared to a cheap plug-and-play mainstream router with built-in "gigabit" switch. And I can damn well guarantee you that I won't be setting that stuff up for someone else - If I did, I'd be basically volunteering myself firmly as their personal IT guy, should any issues arise or changes needed
  12. What does your motherboard manual say this code means? Regarding your sleep study, it says abnormal shutdown after hybrid sleep - so this hybrid sleep attempt is unintentional / i.e. while you are actively using the pc?
  13. Those are all multiplayer games, and both and Have multiplayer game / co-op modes Is it possible that you only experience issues while playing online with others?
  14. Ok - You never responded about the airflow in your case - is there plenty of air passing the backside of your GPU? While on the topic of airflow, can you post a pic showing how your cooling configuration is? Are those GPU temps or CPU temps?
  15. This could indicate that the GPU doesn't receive data / things to work on when the stutter occurs, so it could be CPU or memory related. But let's start with DDU and install latest nvidia drivers from nvidia's site, as suggested by @CommanderAlex A thing of note regarding this card, is that half of its memory modules are located on the back, and can get quite hot. Is there sufficient airflow moving past the backplate of the GPU? Are there some games where the issue is more frequent than others? If so, which ones?
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