Gaming PC crashes when taxed in any Video Game

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  • ghostrider1982
    PCHF Member
    • Nov 2022
    • 15

    #1

    Gaming PC crashes when taxed in any Video Game

    All,

    I have been having a problem with my PC for several weeks now that it will work perfectly fine until I try to play video games with it. I can watch movies/videos, play emulator games, stream videos, surf the web etc. and rarely does it every have a single issue. However, the moment I fire up a game in some short period of time the system will crash. Normally to black screen (various errors in event viewer related to nvlddmkm) where it will either recover with the game crashed out or the system will reboot. This can happen 1-2minutes in or 1hr in it’s very sporadic but once it happens if the system recovers and I try to go back in it generally crashes again very quickly. I tried some fix that was on YouTube about BlackScreen nvlddmkm where it had me ensure the video driver is the most current and made sure power settings are maxed but it had little effect. I’ve also monitored temperatures but nothing gets too high (CPU taxed 40-50C) (GPU taxed 70-80C).

    I don’t think the issue is RAM as I’ve ran MemTest multiple times on my RAM with no faults and also i’ve tested my PC with 8gb/16/32gb and get the same crashes. It actually seems like it crashes faster when I have all 4 sticks/32gb of RAM in then when I run 16gb. So this leads me more towards a MB or Power issue but I can’t rule out the graphics card either. I have a 750W power supply so power should be adequate if it’s quality power. Another weird thing that I don’t know if it’s related at all or not is I have RGB ram and very quickly it goes out of color sync which makes me again wonder if there is an MB/Power issue or if it’s not related at all. When I start the system it’s synced but in no time it goes out of sync in a rainbow configuration.

    Any additional troubleshooting steps, guidance or feedback would be greatly appreciated. I’ve attached the speccy report results link below. Thank you.

  • phillpower2
    PCHF Administrator
    • Sep 2016
    • 15205

    #2
    While I look at Speccy can you post the brand and model name or number of the PSU.

    Comment

    • ghostrider1982
      PCHF Member
      • Nov 2022
      • 15

      #3
      Thermaltake Toughpower PF1 750W

      Comment

      • phillpower2
        PCHF Administrator
        • Sep 2016
        • 15205

        #4
        Looked at Speccy and saw a couple of things but need to get back to you about them when I get back home.

        Your PSU while of good quality is too weak to support your GPU, ASUS state a minimum of an 850W PSU for your GPU.

        Comment

        • ghostrider1982
          PCHF Member
          • Nov 2022
          • 15

          #5
          Well crap…I guess that’s the cheapest fix if that’s the problem

          Comment

          • phillpower2
            PCHF Administrator
            • Sep 2016
            • 15205

            #6
            A good quality 850W PSU is not what I would call cheap tbh, ASUS makes various versions of the RTX 3080, a couple require two 8 pin supplemental power dongles from the PSU but most of them require three, example card here requires two, all versions require 850W minimum.

            Best value I could find CORSAIR RM850 CP-9020235-NA 850 W ATX 80 PLUS GOLD Certified Full Modular Power Supply amazon also have it at the same price.

            Speccy is not giving us your RAM specs, can you post the brand and model name or number for us.
            Power Profile
            Active power scheme: Norton Utilities Premium -[COLOR=rgb(226, 80, 65)] Ultra Performance

            Never heard of such garbage, Norton should stick to what they know and leave everything else well alone.

            Change the Windows Power Plan to Balanced, Ultra and High Performance are a form of overclocking that is known to cause stability and overheating issues, the setting should only be used for gaming type notebooks that have a discrete GPU that needs the extra power.[/COLOR]

            Comment

            • ghostrider1982
              PCHF Member
              • Nov 2022
              • 15

              #7
              Ok I just changed the power back to High Performance, didn’t even notice Norton Utilities had done that.

              My GPU requires only 2 8-pin connectors from the PSU. I believe this is my specific GPU spec page: https://www.asus.com/motherboards-co...ming/techspec/

              As for the RAM it’s GSKILL 8GB DDR4-4000. I found it’s info here: F4-4000C18Q-32GTZRB - Specification - G.SKILL International Enterprise Co., Ltd.

              Comment

              • ghostrider1982
                PCHF Member
                • Nov 2022
                • 15

                #8
                Sorry I changed it to Balanced not High Performance.

                I just opened up my old PC case and it has the below Power Supply:

                https://www.newegg.com/evga-supernov...82E16817438013

                Do you think this would be ok to swap out for the 750W ( Toughpower PF1 750w- TT Premium Edition ) I have now and see if the problems are resolved? I bought this PSU 8years ago but it never had a problem everything else just went out of date on my old system.

                Comment

                • phillpower2
                  PCHF Administrator
                  • Sep 2016
                  • 15205

                  #9
                  Norton and the likes are commonly referred to as snake oil that no good ever comes from, why have you even got it on your machine.

                  Did you never notice that the specs for your card say 850W.

                  That is the wrong RAM for your CPU, Intel state here up to 3200MHz and if you have XMP enabled the RAM will get auto OCd past what the CPU can handle and the PC fall over.

                  Go into the BIOS, disable XMP and then manually set the RAM to run at 3200MHz and the voltage to 1.35V, save the new settings and exit the BIOS.

                  The EVGA was a great PSU and being that it is only eight years old it still has two years of its ten year warranty period left, if you never had problems with it previously it should be safe to swap in, spec wise it is all there but only you know of its condition so you must make the final decision.

                  Comment

                  • ghostrider1982
                    PCHF Member
                    • Nov 2022
                    • 15

                    #10
                    So as you might be able to tell this wasn’t a custom PC build. I bought it via CyberPower. My mistake to think they wouldn’t give you specs in a model that don’t go together such as the RAM with the CPU and the GPU with the power supply.

                    I’ve made the changed in the BIOS for the RAM and am going to swap out the PSU now and see how it goes. Will let you know.

                    Comment

                    • phillpower2
                      PCHF Administrator
                      • Sep 2016
                      • 15205

                      #11
                      No idea why CyberPower did that, it is both wasteful and costly not for them but for you.

                      Aye, keep us posted and good luck.

                      Comment

                      • ghostrider1982
                        PCHF Member
                        • Nov 2022
                        • 15

                        #12
                        No joy. Replaced the power supply. Have some other issues to sort out when it comes to the CPU cooler and the fans not working on the radiator (don’t think they have) but when it comes to crashing it still happens maybe even more so now. I think it’s the video card. I try to run a stress test on the video card and literally within 10-30seconds it crashes out every time either it recovers or goes straight into a PC reboot. I tried moving the video card to a different slot but it didn’t change anything. Think i’ll have to send it in as its under warranty.

                        Comment

                        • Pyro
                          PCHF Member
                          • Jan 2019
                          • 1189

                          #13
                          An easy test to help, pull the GPU and run off the video output on the CPU (The video output on the motherboard), go back and try the same test.

                          If that solves your issue, it might be worth doing a display driver reinstall before shipping it out for warranty repair.

                          It’s possible the fan curve in the BIOS is set to maintain low-speed or no-speed fans until the computer heats up a little, I would make sure that you have them plugged into the proper headers first though, overheating can get expensive very quickly.

                          Be mindful of what you can and cannot tamper with in accordance with your warranty/warranties.

                          Comment

                          • ghostrider1982
                            PCHF Member
                            • Nov 2022
                            • 15

                            #14
                            I did what you suggested and while it was blazing at 6FPS at 4K Res and 16FPS at 1080 the system never crashed whereas with the video card it gets to full power and then crashes in 10-30seconds.

                            What would you suggest for reinstalling drivers. I’ve had various iterations of the Nvidia drivers over the past few months and nothing really changed the issue i just didn’t have time to deal with it until now and I’d really like to use my Gaming RIG for more than just watching shows and surfing the web which is all I can really do with it right now.

                            As for the CPU Cooler, it’s a Thermaltae Floe Riing RGB 240 seen here: Amazon.com

                            It has 2 fans on the radiator and the block on the CPU. The block on the CPU has a separate connection to the Motherboard and I can tell it’s working when i touch the connectors to and from the radiator but the Fans only have a connection that goes to a TT controller box. It allows me to go into the Thermtake software and change the RGB colors just fine the but the fans never spin up at all. I’m not sure what to look for in the BIOS as far as Fan Curve, all the ASUS bios has is something about QFAN controls or whatever and i tried to set it all to just run 100pct to see if i could get the fans to spin but they just won’t. I mean the processor never seems to get hot but I can’t believe that never spinning is a common state for those fans on a radiator designed to dissipate heat. I have 3 other case fans but they are not adjustable as they are all controlled together. What’s weird is there is a reading for CPU fan and I can’t figure out what it’s tracking when it talks CPU fan as there is no other fan and it varies in speed. In the Aura Sync I can vary the speed of said fan but I do not know where this mystery fan resides because as far as I know there is no other fan, unless it’s somehow referring to the block on the CPU.

                            Comment

                            • ghostrider1982
                              PCHF Member
                              • Nov 2022
                              • 15

                              #15
                              I put the Video Card back in and uninstalled all Nvidia software and then went to Device Manager and uninstalled the Graphics Card but it finds the driver again and installs it moment later. I then ran the same stress test and was getting 325FPS at 1080 but then after about 8 seconds artifacts pop up all over the screen and the system goes black and immediately restarts. It’s at 100pct Power when this happens. Again we though power issue earlier but i’ve now swapped to a 1000W PSU and it’s making on difference.

                              Comment

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