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Shade-0117

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About Shade-0117

  • Birthday Aug 17, 1993

Contact Methods

  • Steam
    Shade0117
  • Xbox Live
    Shade 0117
  • Twitter
    ShadeAssault

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    PA, United States
  • Interests
    Games
    Music
    Drinking
    Food
  • Occupation
    Dead End, Little Pay

System

  • CPU
    AMD A-10 6800K @ 4.5GHz (AMD Test Drive)
  • Motherboard
    Gigabyte G1.Sniper A88X
  • RAM
    8GB (2x4GB) AMD RP1866 (AMD Test Drive)
  • GPU
    nVidia EVGA GTX 780 Hydro Copper
  • Case
    Fractal Design Arc Midi R2 (AMD Test Drive)
  • Storage
    OCZ Agility 4 240GB, OCZ Agility 3 120GB, WD 1TB Black, Hitachi 500GB
  • PSU
    Cooler Master Silent Pro Hybrid 850W
  • Display(s)
    3x Acer H236HLbid 23"
  • Cooling
    XSPC 5 1/4" x2 Bay Res w/ D5 Pump, XSPC Raystorm AMD Waterblock, Swiftec EVGA Branded GTX 780 Waterblock, XSPC EX280 Rad
  • Keyboard
    Logitech G510s Keyboard
  • Mouse
    Logitech G700s Mouse
  • Sound
    Logitech G430 Headset, Logitech Z506 5.1 Surround Speakers
  • PCPartPicker URL

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Shade-0117's Achievements

  1. https://hothardware.com/news/samsung-hynix-and-micron-dram-class-action-suit-collusion The title pretty much sums it up. We know that China has been looking into price fixing but now according to the firm Hagens Berman there is precedent for an actual lawsuit. Hagens Berman is the firm that sued against Samsung and Hynix the last time price fixing happened resulting in a 300 million dollar settlement. Check the article and post others if you find them from other sources please.
  2. And nope. After starting my PC this morning, I started having the "[Application] has be clocked from accessing the Graphics Hardware" error again. Apparently something changes between last night and this morning. I'm done, both systems are getting torn apart and sold.
  3. Okay, I seem to have fixed the problem, not optimal, but at least I can play games for the first time in a week. So, since my last post I have fixed the "Display Driver has Crashed and Recovered", but in fixing it there was another issue that popped up. In order to fix the first problem of the drivers crashing with no error messages other than the driver has crashed and recovered, I followed https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/2665946. The problem appears to be that the graphics card hangs just long enough before outputting a new instruction to the monitor that Windows deems that it has crashed. Windows then closes the drivers and restarts them in an attempt to get the graphics card to continue working. Problem is that the graphics card is about to output a new instruction and Windows has no need to intervene, just wait a little bit longer. Windows restarting the drivers is what causes the error messages and the drivers being restarted is what crashes the game. What this fix does is just tells Windows to wait longer for the graphics card to output an instruction. I used the 8 value that was recommended in the article and it appears to be working, though I am sure that you could tweak that number if you still have issues. Using that, I tested with GTA V again and had a new issue. It started crashing as it had before, but now instead of the "Display Driver has Crashed and Successfully Recovered", I was getting a message saying "[Application] has been blocked form accessing the Graphics Hardware" AND a pop up message behind the game that stated, "ERR_GFX_D3D_INIT". Lol what? Okay... After research I found that this is a common issue with GTA V, so I decided to use a new game as my test game. Dragon Age: Inquisition started giving me the same issue. Namely, I was talking to the Enchanter in the outcropping just behind Redcliffe Village in the Hinterlands. But it was not just talking to her, after getting past that part I was still having the issue every 5-10 minutes. I found: https://support.rockstargames.com/hc/communities/public/questions/203458477-ERR-GFX-D3D-INIT-Crash-BSOD People were reporting, "This worked for me: I am running the game without VSYNC and in Borderless window with tesselation OFF. I couldn't run the game for more than 5 mins with these settings on before I disabled them". This worked for me, but only to fix the "ERR_GFX_D3D_INIT" pop up. DA:I and GTA V would now go longer ~30 minutes before crashing, and would no longer output the "ERR_GFX_D3D_INIT" box, but they still had the "[Application] has been blocked form accessing the Graphics Hardware" I found this: http://steamcommunity.com/app/200110/discussions/0/35219681738161861/#p3 In here they say something about it possibly being PhysX (Which I am running an AMD card so that is a reasonable assumption) but neither GTA nor DA:I have the ability to disable PhysX effects in the game settings. The other thing that was mentioned is that someone underclocked their GPU by 100 MHz from the Core and Memory clocks. I was still running the stock clocks with the power limit and voltage changes that I mentioned in a post before. I decided to try the 100 MHz underclock on Memory and Core with those same Power and Voltage changes from before. Boom. 45 minutes no crashing in DA:I, but my performance was suffering something awful. I decided to take only 5% from my Core and Memory clocks, which minimized the amount of performance decrease I was seeing, but still results in no crashing. I played GTA V online with some friends for about 2 and a half hours last night, and then went into Hitman :Absolution for a mission (Which I could not previously get to the next checkpoint without crashing), and then went into Dragon Age: Inquisition for 3 hours. No crashes, no hiccups, nothing to indicate system instability. It looks like I have fixed it, and hopefully if someone else is reading this because of the same issues you can follow my breadcrumbs. Here is exactly what fixed it for me: 1. Do the registry changes found on this article https://support.micr...n-us/kb/2665946 2. Download and install MSi Afterburner. Go to settings and tell it to run on Windows startup (Sometimes it won't work and you have to launch it manually). Also check "Unlock Core Voltage Control" and "Force Constant Voltage". Then using the sliders put your Core Voltage at +25 mV, and power limit at +5%. Then take between 5 and 10% from your Core and Memory clocks and set those sliders to the resulting numbers (If you click on the numbers you can manually input numbers as opposed to fighting with the sliders. If you still have the crashing issues, try taking a little more off the clocks.) I'll post my resulting numbers below. It might be a good idea to manually set a fan curve too, just to make sure your GPU stays cool, I personally do not let it get about 75C and I target 70C as a max operating temperature. 3. Disable Tessellation, VSync, and run games in Windowed Borderless (I'm not sure if you really have to do this step, but normally I run in Windowed Borderless anyways, I almost always have Vsync off by default, and the only thing that I had to change was Tessellation - of which did not change my performance or visual quality by any amount that I could notice.) Here are the numbers that I am running my R9 290 at now: Core Voltage: +25 mV Power Limit: +5%​ Core: 925 MHz Memory: 1185 MHz ​ the stock number for the chip are: No boost to Core Voltage or Power Limit Core: 975 MHz Memory: 1250 MHz I really hope this will help someone else save the time it takes to fix this crap.
  4. It seems that no one else has any input onto my issue, but I will continue to post (Specifically if I resolve the problem) so that if someone else is having the same issue, they might find something useful in my trail. I've found an article on the Microsoft support page that I am now investigating. https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/2665946
  5. No go. No crashes in Kombustor or in 3DMark. But I started up Grand Theft Auto V and started messing around in that. After about 10 minutes it crashed. Black screen, Windows made the noise of a notification popping up (Like it always does for the display drivers crashing and 'recovering'), then it made the noise a second time, and the screen never came back up. That tells me the drivers completely failed and could not reinitialize. PCIe slots were clean as well, no gunk or anything out of the ordinary that I could see. I'm seriously at a loss now. No idea what is going on. I don't think it is a hardware fault; temps are in acceptable levels even for that last GTAV crash I was at 71C, so many different iterations of hardware, underclocking, overclocking, increasing voltage limits, reflashing BIOS... Thinking about selling all this hardware and building a whole new system.
  6. I read through that ATI article and unfortunately did not see anything that I think is pertinent. As to DirectX, I doubt it. I have tried reinstalling it many times over the past week and nothing seems to fix the problem. In the first setup that I posted, I had games installed over 3 different hard drives (OCZ Agility 4 240GB SSD, Western Digital Black 1TB HDD, and a Western Digital Green 2TB HDD). They all had the same problem. In my current setup I have all of them installed to a Western Digital Black 1TB, but I can try installing a few games on my boot drive, OCZ Agility-3 120GB, and see if that makes a difference. I will check the contacts on the motherboard next, that is a good suggestion and I have not done that. I do look at the pins on the cards after I pull them out but I did not think to look at the slot itself. Windowed mode is a no-go. Another of the things that I have tried. I get the same issues with Fullscreen, Windowed Fullscreen, and Windowed modes. I'll report back after I check the PCIe slot pins on my mobo. Gonna check both my boards in case it has happened with either or both of them. GhostUnit also found an article online that I had not seen yet, http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-2033153/explain-works-290-black-screen-fix.html. If you scroll down to the 7th or 8th post (The really long one) I am following that right now. I do usually run my GPU's with the power limits raised, but I do not mess with the core voltages like his fix/hypothesis/research/whatever suggests. With those fixes in place I have been running MSi Kombustor on a GPU core burn test for 45 minutes with no crashing and a 10 minute run on the GPU memory with no crashes. I'm moving to 3DMark to run all those tests to see if I get any crashes. If that is successful I guess I'll try gaming.
  7. I have not tried, but I have been having this issue since before the AMD Catalyst drivers called themselves "Omega"... so to rollback to a point that I have no knowledge on would be... pre 14.xx? 2 year old drivers? I'd prefer to find another solution. I don't want to sound like I am dismissing your idea, but I have thought of this already and... yeah 2 year old drivers? I'd rather not. I may try it if something else doesn't pop up and fix my problem but I consider that a last resort, barring someone doesn't give me a really damn good reason to do so.
  8. "C:\WINDOWS\system32>sfc /scannow Beginning system scan. This process will take some time. Beginning verification phase of system scan. Verification 100% complete. Windows Resource Protection did not find any integrity violations." Well it was worth a shot My original config with the Athlon II X4 860K (FM2+ Socket) does not have an iGPU. The CPU is a standard A10 but with the iGPU disabled in manufacturing. The A10 6800K (FM2 Socket) that I am currently running has an AMD HD 8670D (Confirmed with CPU-Z) iGPU, but I am running my second monitor with that right now and it never has a fault. When the GPU drivers crash, that screen stays up. That tells me that the driver for the R9 290 is the one that is crashing (They are separate drivers with separate HDMI audio driver lanes and everything in my device manager).
  9. I am running at stock clocks now, the underclocking had no effect so I reverted. Also, the utility I use, Display Driver Uninstaller (I think it is by TechPowerUp), uninstalls the drivers for you then restarts with Windows set to not automatically find and download whatever it thinks it the best drivers for your display. I will try that and report back.
  10. It seems to only happen during gaming yes. I have not noticed it during any other usage, but this system is generally only used for gaming. I watch YouTube, check email, and such on my laptop. Which I guess I should add that I do not have these problems with. My laptop is an Origin EON-13S. Intel Haswell Core i5 4340M nVidia GeForce GTX 860M 8GB DDR3 1600MHz RAM Please no Intel/nVidia vs. AMD flame wars... I want my computer to work, not have a 200+ post long thread on what people think is better.
  11. I am currently running the 15.8 drivers. I reinstalled earlier today :-(
  12. Hey everyone, I do not post on forums often but I find myself in need of help. Normally I am the guy that everyone goes to for PC help, but I find myself at a loss for the problems that I am having with my own system. What keeps happening is that the AMD drivers keep crashing. Either they crash, pop up the message that the drivers have crashed and recovered and then the game that I was playing crashes in turn (duh) or the whole system goes down; screens go black and the only solution is to hard reset. I'm sorry I cannot be more specific than this but it is happening in every game that I play. Recently I have been replaying alot of games so here is the list of games that I have been having issues in: Mass Effect, Mass Effect 2, Mass Effect 3, Dragon Age: Origins (And all DLC/Expansions as they are the same game), Dragon Age II, Dragon Age: Inquisition, Grand Theft Auto V, Company of Heroes 2, World of Warships, Fallout 3, Fallout: New Vegas, Homeworld Remastered, Hitman: Absolution, Borderlands: The Presequel... yeah. I am pretty sure that the problem is down to something with the drivers or my system. My system setup is kinda complicated. I recently changed over to using my secondary tower as the main had me throwing fits of rage. But the secondary is giving me the same problems, if less frequently. And on top of that I have changed the secondary a bit to compete with the power my primary had. (Note: All 3 of these setups have been giving me the SAME problems) Original Setup: Gigabyte G1.Sniper A88X AMD Athlon II X4 860K Corsair LP 2133 RAM (2x 4GB) PowerColor Radeon R9 290X PowerColor Radeon R9 290 CoolerMaster Hybrid Pro 850W PSU Secondary Setup: MSi FM2-A85XA-G65 AMD A10 6800K Radeon RP1866 RAM (2x 4GB) HIS Radeon HD7750 Fractal Design Tesla 650W PSU Current Setup: MSi FM2-A85XA-G65 AMD A10 6800K Corsair LP 2133 (2x 4GB) and Radeon RP1866 (2x 4GB) RAM (I know I am running 2 different kits, see later explanation) PowerColor Radeon R9 290 Fractal Design Tesla 650W PSU Now, to this point I have been dealing with the issue but it is really staring to grind my gears -- namely cause I have started playing MP games with my friends again. So, what have I tried? Here is another list, and this is just what I can remember having tried: 1. Uninstalling and reinstalling the AMD drivers, both the beta and non-beta versions (I use DDU to completely remove the drivers) 2. Underclocking my GPU 3. Underclocking my CPU 4. Changing RAM 5. Removing the Crossfire setup 6. Running MSi Afterburner to monitor temps 7. Uninstalling and reinstalling DX 8. Updated BIOS on motherboard (Both on the previous and current setups) 9. Updated BIOS on the R9 290 10. Changing out 8 pin connectors from PSU to GPU 11. Flipping switch on the 290 from normal mode to quiet mode and vice versa 12. Various fixes that are specific game related (Disabling in-game for programs, overlays, specific profiles, blah blah) So, for the RAM configuration that I am currently running, I found that I am having the same issues regardless of which RAM kit I have in my system and the fact that I am having the same issue with BOTH kits installed, directs me to thinking that the RAM is not the issue. I do know that RAM problems can emulate problems with other parts of your system... but in this case I think that I have already proved that it is not the RAM. Also, you will note that I have not mentioned what OS I am running, that is because I am currently running Windows 10. But, I have been having the same issues since I was running Windows 7. So I have had these issues with Windows 7, 8, 8.1, 10 Technical Preview, and 10 Official Release (All fresh installs BTW). Like the RAM, this leads me to believe that my problem is independent of the operating system that I am running. (Does kinda tempt me to try it with Linux though) I think this is about all that I have to say about it. If you have any ideas, please post them cause I am at the end of what I know what to do.
  13. I have not used an Intel processor outside of a laptop since... oh my Intel Pentium Pro. With this I would buy a high end motherboard and compare the performance against my current AMD CPU's/APU's.
  14. Hm, favorite item in the bundle? The fans. Make fun of me but I normally replace the fans that cases come with right off the bat so the fact they are giving away replacement fans is awesome to me.
  15. Well I'll get my name in for the giveaway. I went full AMD after nVidia released its driver update that disables PhysX when AMD GPUs are detected in your system, which killed me cause I was running an A10-6800K and an EVGA GTX780 Hydro Copper at the time and it saw the processor as an AMD GPU even though the iGPU wasn't in use. Now that I have a straight FM2+ CPU, not an APU, I wonder how much of a performance boost a 980 would give me over my reference 290X...
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