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Posts
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About PapaPP
- Birthday February 19
Contact Methods
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Steam
Waffleslayyerr
Profile Information
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Gender
Female
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Location
Paradis
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Interests
Reviewing PC builds and attempting to help people troubleshoot
System
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CPU
Ryzen 5 3600
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Motherboard
MSI B450 Gaming Pro Carbon AC
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RAM
16gb GSkill 3200mhz CL 14
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GPU
Gigabyte RTX 2070 Super Gaming OC
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Case
Fractal Meshify C ATX Mid-Tower
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Storage
275 Crucial SSD
4TB WD Black HDD -
PSU
RMx 650W 80+ Gold
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Display(s)
MSI Optix MAG27CQ 27" 2560x1440 144hz
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Cooling
Corsair H100i PRO
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Keyboard
Corsair K55
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Mouse
Corsair Harpoon
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Sound
Kingston HyperX Cloud
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Operating System
Windows 10
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Laptop
Microsoft Laptop 1st Gen
Recent Profile Visitors
395 profile views
PapaPP's Achievements
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Oh yeah no for sure. I just chose Nvidia because I was hearing more negative than good reviews on the 5700XT. I think AMD needs more time to flatten out their driver issues.
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I know it was driver related. I have a friend who has the same card with zero issues, I personally just didn't feel like dealing with the hassle.
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That's what I heard also. I almost went with the 5700XT, but switched due to the heinous amount of issues that people have been having with that card. I thought better safe then sorry. But No issues so far. Runs like a dream
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Yesss, your upgrade is the same thing I got, except I got a 2070 Super. Do ittt
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is this a good pc we picked out for my friend
PapaPP replied to Liquid Cooled Pickle's topic in New Builds and Planning
What's the point in two ssd's? Unless you're really worried about game loading times. I'd recommend a hdd in place of the second one, and make the primary ssd with the windows boot the NVME. Also go with the 3600, if necessary you can just OC it to the same speeds as the 3600x without harm. -
Yes, this is the real fix. and No, I know the real reason now. I did not install Windows to be formatted correctly for UEFI. It was installed in regards to Legacy; so when making the conversion it did not take it well. Therefore, properly installing Windows with the correct foundation was it. That was my fix. Read before you type.
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I figured it out. Created a USB drive with Rufus to install Windows 10 with an ISO allowing UEFI and GPT and did a full reinstall and have no issues whatsoever.
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An example of the horrible audio buzzing I was talking about. Does anyone know what to do at all? FullSizeRender.mov
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Bios is fully updated, and no I have not tried the ram yet. It was working perfectly fine when I first got it about less than a month ago
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I've had it since about February in 2018. Not too old. Here's a video showing how bad my mouse is. No audio but it's buzzing away. F0DED89A-630F-4113-BF34-6D168B1EDF0A.MP4
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Hello friendlys, I find myself posting on this forum far too often due to my never-ending PC issues. My build: MSI b450 Gaming Pro Carbon AC Ryzen 5 3600 16gb 3200mhz 275gb ssd (Taken from old build), 4TB hdd (Brand new) 2070 Super -- So My issue started where I was having strange booting instances that I found uncomfortable. The reason was found to be that my bios was in legacy mode, and not uefi. So I converted it. All was well, and then I noticed a "System Reserved" with a drive letter, next to my two other drives. Being the horrible perfectionist I am, I wanted to get rid of it because it was an eyesore. Yes I know, I am in a never ending cycle of "If it isnt broken, then don't fix it." I didn't delete the partition, rather I just removed the drive letter. Turned out that caused some issues, which started the stuttering and lagging in anything, even just browsing on the desktop. I initialized the System Reserved partition again with a drive letter, restarted the computer, and it seemed alright. I must also add that after I removed the drive letter, the PC was having a hard time restarting, and was taking long periods of time to restart. After it actually restarted, it seemed alright. Even restarted it again to make sure, and so it was. And then my dumb self said well let's try to remove some junk shall we, so I installed the IOBit software and ran a scan did whatever it suggested, turned it off, turned it back on, and boom all of my issues were back. I tried resetting Windows while keeping my personal files thinking it would help, but it didn't. It was acting the same as described, which is not the way a fresh install of Windows should be acting. So now at witts end I am trying a TOTAL reinstall of Windows, where I use the media creation tool to completely remove everything and start fresh hoping it will work. Sorry for the rant, but I would really like some insight because I put much money and work into this computer and I am most certainly not letting it go down the drain. Is there something better I could have done to prevent all of this? Is it an issue residing in the conversion from legacy to uefi? Please give me your insight.