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21 minutes ago, Anonymous5603 said:

I'm getting this issue where my PC will BSOD with the error 'Video TDR Failure'. Can anyone tell me how I can fix this issue? I've tried reinstalling the graphics driver, resetting the PC and just fresh installed Win 10 but I'm still facing this issue. 

Yeah, by that stage its obviously hardware trouble. Do the fan still spin on the GPU, whats their clock speed under idle and load condition before crash, and how long can you put that load before it just crash out?

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22 minutes ago, SorryClaire said:

 

Yeah, by that stage its obviously hardware trouble. Do the fan still spin on the GPU, whats their clock speed under idle and load condition before crash, and how long can you put that load before it just crash out?

Yes, the fans do spin and the clock speed seems to be about the same I think. I didn't look at it that much. But I did ran it overclocked pretty high. It's a GTX 1050 Ti MSI Gaming X with 150+ on core and 800 on memory. Maybe that is what killed it but if it is a hardware issue like you said, well, I'm dead. Thank you for the reply. 

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@Anonymous5603

 

A quick Google search gave me this:

 

"TDR is the Timeout, Detection, and Recovery component in Windows. What happens is the Graphics Display driver for the installed graphics card stops responding. When this happens, windows will stop and restart the driver to fix the problem.

 

The most common reason for this issue is that the graphics device is being overloaded or used beyond its capabilities.


This happens most often when playing graphic intensive games, but can happen with any process that uses a large amount of graphic resources, such as when editing or creating videos."

 

Try undoing any overclocks you have on the video card, you might have pushed your GPU a little to far. Also, you can  try stripping down the card and apply new thermal paste... sometimes that helps, or at least it won't do more damage to your card.

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2 hours ago, Anonymous5603 said:

It's a GTX 1050 Ti MSI Gaming X with 150+ on core and 800 on memory.

Oh if thats the case then reset your OC to default.

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3 hours ago, zogthegreat said:

@Anonymous5603

 

A quick Google search gave me this:

 

"TDR is the Timeout, Detection, and Recovery component in Windows. What happens is the Graphics Display driver for the installed graphics card stops responding. When this happens, windows will stop and restart the driver to fix the problem.

 

The most common reason for this issue is that the graphics device is being overloaded or used beyond its capabilities.


This happens most often when playing graphic intensive games, but can happen with any process that uses a large amount of graphic resources, such as when editing or creating videos."

 

Try undoing any overclocks you have on the video card, you might have pushed your GPU a little to far. Also, you can  try stripping down the card and apply new thermal paste... sometimes that helps, or at least it won't do more damage to your card.

I did. I even under clocked it a little to see if that works. To be honest I'm still not feeling that confident. 

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