Reduce as many usb devices as possible and then give it a test..
Going into low fps range in games on high end system is unplayable.
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FPS drops are not my thing per say, as I’m not a gamer.
on top of what has already been suggested, try the following.
all I can add is if you have your PC as lean and clean as you can make it, that’s part of the battle.
sadly, the other parts may be outside your control like; number of users of your network, bandwidth, line attenuation, signal to noise ratio, etc.
but things you can control are;
• reboot modem/router/pc
• delete restore points
• turn off hibernation
• empty web browser cache
• delete system temp files
• scan Windows for system corruption
• scan drive for file corruption
• disable unwanted scheduled tasks
• disable unnecessary startup services
• disable scheduled defragging
• trim any SSD’s
• turn off Timeline and Activity History, and all things Microsoft Telemetry based
• empty recycle bin
• delete log files and error reports
• remove old Windows Updates files
• cleanup software installer and distribution caches
• delete unwanted programs
• remove any browser extensions
• pause any online cloud storage synchronising (OneDrive, DropBox)
CCleaner or Glary Disk Cleaner or the inbuilt cleanmgr command can do most of those points.
ShutUp10 by O&O Software can stop a lot of telemetry items.
other things to try;
• create another user account and login under that profile
• check for firmware updates for modem/router and PC BIOS
do a web speed check - go to www.speedtest.net and post the results.
has there been any changes in the time frame that the FPS rates have dropped?
like new software or hardware, or extra users on the network?Comment
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Hey Thank you will try the above.Originally posted by BruceFPS drops are not my thing per say, as I’m not a gamer.
on top of what has already been suggested, try the following.
all I can add is if you have your PC as lean and clean as you can make it, that’s part of the battle.
sadly, the other parts may be outside your control like; number of users of your network, bandwidth, line attenuation, signal to noise ratio, etc.
but things you can control are;
• reboot modem/router/pc
• delete restore points
• turn off hibernation
• empty web browser cache
• delete system temp files
• scan Windows for system corruption
• scan drive for file corruption
• disable unwanted scheduled tasks
• disable unnecessary startup services
• disable scheduled defragging
• trim any SSD’s
• turn off Timeline and Activity History, and all things Microsoft Telemetry based
• empty recycle bin
• delete log files and error reports
• remove old Windows Updates files
• cleanup software installer and distribution caches
• delete unwanted programs
• remove any browser extensions
• pause any online cloud storage synchronising (OneDrive, DropBox)
CCleaner or Glary Disk Cleaner or the inbuilt cleanmgr command can do most of those points.
ShutUp10 by O&O Software can stop a lot of telemetry items.
other things to try;
• create another user account and login under that profile
• check for firmware updates for modem/router and PC BIOS
do a web speed check - go to www.speedtest.net and post the results.
has there been any changes in the time frame that the FPS rates have dropped?
like new software or hardware, or extra users on the network?Comment
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Hello ADtk, for some reason I was not notified of my tag.
To better help you, let’s get some more information about the state of your system.
Please download and run speccy.
Once you have ran speccy, follow the instructions to upload a snapshot found here.
[HEADING=3]To publish a Speccy profile to the Web:[/HEADING]
[ol]
[li]In Speccy, click File, and then click Publish Snapshot.[/li][li]In the Publish Snapshot dialog box, click Yes to enable Speccy to proceed.[/li][li]Speccy publishes the profile and displays a second Publish Snapshot dialog box. You can open the URL in your default browser, copy it to the clipboard, or close the dialog box.[/li][/ol]
If the unit is a desktop unit, please look in the computer and tell your exact model of PSU, this should include the manufacturer, model, and efficiency rating.Comment
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Hey Pyro,
Thanks for reaching out.
Below is the requested info:
My Speccy url:
Sorry I don’t know how to get into the computer and give you PSU details but this is the exact one I have:
Thanks for helpingComment
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What a monster of a machine, congrats, that’s awesome.- Try cleaning/organizing your drives.
Run Disk Cleanup (check all the boxes) this will delete things such as your recycling bin, so make sure you don’t have any files you want to keep.
Run Defragment and Optimize Drives, run this on your drives.- Disable any overclocking or changes to power/performance settings
Turn off XMP/any overclocking you may have done (if any)
Settings > System > Power and sleep > Additional power settings
Make sure your power plan is set to balanced, anything else could tamper with the wrong settings and cause issues.- Check for Operating System Corruption
Right click on the Windows logo in the bottom left and select Windows Powershell (Admin)
Run these three commands separately:
sfc /scannow
Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth
Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth
These will take a while to run, do not close out of Powershell while they are running, if one fails then move onto the next and then loop back around.
Note: It doesn’t hurt to make a system backup before you make all these changes, save any important files of folders. While these changes shouldn’t cause any issues, better to be safe than sorry.- Unplug unnecessary devices.
If you have a gamepad, extra monitor, external hard drive/flash drive, or anything that is not essential to using the computer plugged in, unplug it. You should be left with your monitor, mouse and keyboard.
Once you have completed all of these tasks, restart it (using the restart option in the power menu) and re-test.
Furthermore, what games are you experiencing the issues in specifically? Is one worse than the others?Comment
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Hey thank you so much pyro. I will do the above as soon as I can and get back to you. All the games are same. Whatever game I have played behaves the same when it gets around the 100 fps range and below. I have yet to experience that buttery smooth 60fps or 120 fps one might experience on ps5/series x. 60 fps in any game on my pc is just a no go. It feels like 20 fps. So I keep wondering even after getting one of the best hardware I can’t enjoy games. I even went all out on the monitor which is quite expensive but no luck.Originally posted by PyroWhat a monster of a machine, congrats, that’s awesome.- Try cleaning/organizing your drives.
Run Disk Cleanup (check all the boxes) this will delete things such as your recycling bin, so make sure you don’t have any files you want to keep.
Run Defragment and Optimize Drives, run this on your drives.- Disable any overclocking or changes to power/performance settings
Turn off XMP/any overclocking you may have done (if any)
Settings > System > Power and sleep > Additional power settings
Make sure your power plan is set to balanced, anything else could tamper with the wrong settings and cause issues.- Check for Operating System Corruption
Right click on the Windows logo in the bottom left and select Windows Powershell (Admin)
Run these three commands separately:
sfc /scannow
Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth
Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth
These will take a while to run, do not close out of Powershell while they are running, if one fails then move onto the next and then loop back around.
Note: It doesn’t hurt to make a system backup before you make all these changes, save any important files of folders. While these changes shouldn’t cause any issues, better to be safe than sorry.- Unplug unnecessary devices.
If you have a gamepad, extra monitor, external hard drive/flash drive, or anything that is not essential to using the computer plugged in, unplug it. You should be left with your monitor, mouse and keyboard.
Once you have completed all of these tasks, restart it (using the restart option in the power menu) and re-test.
Furthermore, what games are you experiencing the issues in specifically? Is one worse than the others?Comment
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Ran all three tests on windows powershell.Originally posted by PyroWhat a monster of a machine, congrats, that’s awesome.- Try cleaning/organizing your drives.
Run Disk Cleanup (check all the boxes) this will delete things such as your recycling bin, so make sure you don’t have any files you want to keep.
Run Defragment and Optimize Drives, run this on your drives.- Disable any overclocking or changes to power/performance settings
Turn off XMP/any overclocking you may have done (if any)
Settings > System > Power and sleep > Additional power settings
Make sure your power plan is set to balanced, anything else could tamper with the wrong settings and cause issues.- Check for Operating System Corruption
Right click on the Windows logo in the bottom left and select Windows Powershell (Admin)
Run these three commands separately:
sfc /scannow
Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth
Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth
These will take a while to run, do not close out of Powershell while they are running, if one fails then move onto the next and then loop back around.
Note: It doesn’t hurt to make a system backup before you make all these changes, save any important files of folders. While these changes shouldn’t cause any issues, better to be safe than sorry.- Unplug unnecessary devices.
If you have a gamepad, extra monitor, external hard drive/flash drive, or anything that is not essential to using the computer plugged in, unplug it. You should be left with your monitor, mouse and keyboard.
Once you have completed all of these tasks, restart it (using the restart option in the power menu) and re-test.
Furthermore, what games are you experiencing the issues in specifically? Is one worse than the others?
And these are the results:
sfc /scannow
[ATTACH type=“full”]10171[/ATTACH]
Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth
[ATTACH type=“full”]10172[/ATTACH]
Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth
[ATTACH type=“full”]10173[/ATTACH]
Nothing changed really. Warzone for example runs at 180-200 fps on high settings. If I cap it to 100 fps it feels like 30 fps. Otherwise there is no issue in games on high fps as such.Comment
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Thanks. Hopefully there’s an answer.Originally posted by ADtkNo, running a single gpu.
Drivers are up to date
Background apps are just your regular ones on windows 11. Not sure if there’s one or few in particular that might be causing this issue. but the apps I have installed and run in the background are icue, logitech g hub and msi afterburner/riva tuner
I don’t use any third party antivirus software.Comment
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so did not use ddu for it. when windows was installed it downloaded the drivers and then I upgraded from the nvidia website to the latest driversOriginally posted by PyroHave you run DDU to ensure that your display drivers were not automatically installed by Windows as well?Comment
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I would run it and see if that helps, when Windows automatically installs their drivers it only seems to cause more issues in terms of GPUs.
Here is a guide provided by the creators of DDU.
Two crucial steps,- Download your display drivers before hand from Nvidia’s website
- Disconnect your machine from the internet, this will prevent Windows from automatically installing drivers again and forcing you to repeat the process.
Finally, a restore point/backup of any important files wouldn’t hurt before trying DDU.Comment
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