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Will there be as much tearing with the 1070?

N.E.A

I currently have a GTX 550 TI running a 1080P monitor. Will I still get tearing even with adaptive vsync turned on from Nvidia control panel with the GTX 1070?

 

If so, what can I do to solve this? Do I need to get a new monitor? If so please recommend one for me. 

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Adaptive sync requires a gsync monitor to work.

Thats that. If you need to get in touch chances are you can find someone that knows me that can get in touch.

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20 minutes ago, thekeemo said:

Adaptive sync requires a gsync monitor to work.

what? no...

if you don't know truth then why lie? why lie again?

 

there will be no tearing if you turn on VSync, and you can turn it on at 1080p with a 1070 relatively safe knowing there will be no dips, considering you have a CPU matching in performance that is of course

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4 minutes ago, DXMember said:

what? no...

if you don't know truth then why lie? why lie again?

 

there will be no tearing if you turn on VSync, and you can turn it on at 1080p with a 1070 relatively safe knowing there will be no dips, considering you have a CPU matching in performance that is of course

Well I have Core i5 2400 which according to many comparisons is no slouch when stacked up against its newer brothers. So I guess tearing will be over then with the 1070 since it seems to get 100 FPS or more on 1080 so enabling vsync and having it to always put up 60 FPS will make a good experience. Thanks for the assurance. 

 

However, does anyone know a good G-Sync enabled monitor at a reasonable price? 

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26 minutes ago, thekeemo said:

Adaptive sync requires a gsync monitor to work.

No, those are two different things.

 

VSync will stop the tearing at the cost of (slightly) increasing the latency, for most people this will be unnoticeable and only competitive FPS gamers will really care about the tiny bit of lag.

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Having issues with a Corsair AIO? Possible fix here:

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Are you getting weird fan behavior, speed fluctuations, and/or other issues with Link?

Are you running AIDA64, HWinfo, CAM, or HWmonitor? (ASUS suite & other monitoring software often have the same issue.)

Corsair Link has problems with some monitoring software so you may have to change some settings to get them to work smoothly.

-For AIDA64: First make sure you have the newest update installed, then, go to Preferences>Stability and make sure the "Corsair Link sensor support" box is checked and make sure the "Asetek LC sensor support" box is UNchecked.

-For HWinfo: manually disable all monitoring of the AIO sensors/components.

-For others: Disable any monitoring of Corsair AIO sensors.

That should fix the fan issue for some Corsair AIOs (H80i GT/v2, H110i GTX/H115i, H100i GTX and others made by Asetek). The problem is bad coding in Link that fights for AIO control with other programs. You can test if this worked by setting the fan speed in Link to 100%, if it doesn't fluctuate you are set and can change the curve to whatever. If that doesn't work or you're still having other issues then you probably still have a monitoring software interfering with the AIO/Link communications, find what it is and disable it.

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1 minute ago, N.E.A said:

However, does anyone know a good G-Sync enabled monitor at a reasonable price? 

Doesn't really exist yet. The cheapest ones are like $400 for a 1080p panel. If I were you I'd save the money and stick with your monitor until the prices drop more on 1440p or ultra-wide G-sync monitors. Then pick up one of those when the prices aren't so high.

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CPU: Intel i7-6800k @ 4.2-4.4Ghz   CPU COOLER: Bequiet Dark Rock Pro 4   MOBO: MSI X99A SLI Plus   RAM: 32GB Corsair Vengeance LPX quad-channel DDR4-2800  GPU: EVGA GTX 1080 SC2 iCX   PSU: Corsair RM1000i   CASE: Corsair 750D Obsidian   SSDs: 500GB Samsung 960 Evo + 256GB Samsung 850 Pro   HDDs: Toshiba 3TB + Seagate 1TB   Monitors: Acer Predator XB271HUC 27" 2560x1440 (165Hz G-Sync)  +  LG 29UM57 29" 2560x1080   OS: Windows 10 Pro

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Other Systems:

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Home HTPC/NAS-

CPU: AMD FX-8320 @ 4.4Ghz  MOBO: Gigabyte 990FXA-UD3   RAM: 16GB dual-channel DDR3-1600  GPU: Gigabyte GTX 760 OC   PSU: Rosewill 750W   CASE: Antec Gaming One   SSD: 120GB PNY CS1311   HDDs: WD Red 3TB + WD 320GB   Monitor: Samsung SyncMaster 2693HM 26" 1920x1200 -or- Steam Link to Vizio M43C1 43" 4K TV  OS: Windows 10 Pro

 

Offsite NAS/VM Server-

CPU: 2x Xeon E5645 (12-core)  Model: Dell PowerEdge T610  RAM: 16GB DDR3-1333  PSUs: 2x 570W  SSDs: 8GB Kingston Boot FD + 32GB Sandisk Cache SSD   HDDs: WD Red 4TB + Seagate 2TB + Seagate 320GB   OS: FreeNAS 11+

 

Laptop-

CPU: Intel i7-3520M   Model: Dell Latitude E6530   RAM: 8GB dual-channel DDR3-1600  GPU: Nvidia NVS 5200M   SSD: 240GB TeamGroup L5   HDD: WD Black 320GB   Monitor: Samsung SyncMaster 2693HM 26" 1920x1200   OS: Windows 10 Pro

Having issues with a Corsair AIO? Possible fix here:

Spoiler

Are you getting weird fan behavior, speed fluctuations, and/or other issues with Link?

Are you running AIDA64, HWinfo, CAM, or HWmonitor? (ASUS suite & other monitoring software often have the same issue.)

Corsair Link has problems with some monitoring software so you may have to change some settings to get them to work smoothly.

-For AIDA64: First make sure you have the newest update installed, then, go to Preferences>Stability and make sure the "Corsair Link sensor support" box is checked and make sure the "Asetek LC sensor support" box is UNchecked.

-For HWinfo: manually disable all monitoring of the AIO sensors/components.

-For others: Disable any monitoring of Corsair AIO sensors.

That should fix the fan issue for some Corsair AIOs (H80i GT/v2, H110i GTX/H115i, H100i GTX and others made by Asetek). The problem is bad coding in Link that fights for AIO control with other programs. You can test if this worked by setting the fan speed in Link to 100%, if it doesn't fluctuate you are set and can change the curve to whatever. If that doesn't work or you're still having other issues then you probably still have a monitoring software interfering with the AIO/Link communications, find what it is and disable it.

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2 minutes ago, pyrojoe34 said:

Doesn't really exist yet. The cheapest ones are like $400 for a 1080p panel. If I were you I'd save the money and stick with your monitor until the prices drop more on 1440p or ultra-wide G-sync monitors. Then pick up one of those when the prices aren't so high.

Good idea. I thought they were around for a while but it seem they are still relatively new. 

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Internet dweller love to write and read about almost everything.

 

I like to be part of productive and positive communities. 

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5 minutes ago, N.E.A said:

However, does anyone know a good G-Sync enabled monitor at a reasonable price? 

such thing does not exist, wo do not have the technology to make G-Sync enabled devices at a reasonable price

maybe our children or their children will be fortunate enough to stand witness to it

 

I'd advise for an RX480 paired with Acer Predator 144Hz FreeSync panel

CPU: Intel i7 5820K @ 4.20 GHz | MotherboardMSI X99S SLI PLUS | RAM: Corsair LPX 16GB DDR4 @ 2666MHz | GPU: Sapphire R9 Fury (x2 CrossFire)
Storage: Samsung 950Pro 512GB // OCZ Vector150 240GB // Seagate 1TB | PSU: Seasonic 1050 Snow Silent | Case: NZXT H440 | Cooling: Nepton 240M
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36 minutes ago, DXMember said:

what? no...

if you don't know truth then why lie? why lie again?

 

there will be no tearing if you turn on VSync, and you can turn it on at 1080p with a 1070 relatively safe knowing there will be no dips, considering you have a CPU matching in performance that is of course

Adaptive sync not vertical sync.. unless he means the other adaptive sync where vsync turns on and off by itself

Thats that. If you need to get in touch chances are you can find someone that knows me that can get in touch.

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6 minutes ago, thekeemo said:

Adaptive sync not vertical sync..

The term you're looking for is Variable Refresh Rate - VRR

Adaptive Sync is nVidia control panel option that is a toggle - it turns on Vertical Synchronization when your system pumps out frames faster than your display can refresh to remove tearing effect and it turns off Vertical Synchronization when your system cannot keep high enough frame rate to remove stuttering effect

 

usually when people lie so frequently they are advised to see a specialist (prank bro, no hate)

CPU: Intel i7 5820K @ 4.20 GHz | MotherboardMSI X99S SLI PLUS | RAM: Corsair LPX 16GB DDR4 @ 2666MHz | GPU: Sapphire R9 Fury (x2 CrossFire)
Storage: Samsung 950Pro 512GB // OCZ Vector150 240GB // Seagate 1TB | PSU: Seasonic 1050 Snow Silent | Case: NZXT H440 | Cooling: Nepton 240M
FireStrike // Extreme // Ultra // 8K // 16K

 

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2 hours ago, N.E.A said:

I currently have a GTX 550 TI running a 1080P monitor. Will I still get tearing even with adaptive vsync turned on from Nvidia control panel with the GTX 1070?

 

If so, what can I do to solve this? Do I need to get a new monitor? If so please recommend one for me. 

Is NVCP set to override application settings? If not, doesn't matter if Sync is set here... the individual apps might not activate it in their own settings and so you'll still experience tearing...

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