I appreciate the help a ton, will let you know if it completely solved the issue.Not crazy at all, power plans can impact all sorts of things, some people consider it as overclocking (on the same level as XMP).
Keep on it, if you can't replicate the issue, you might have your answer.
You can simply do that by right clicking on the desktop and select the NVIDIA Control Panel and open it. In that go to help tab and select System Information. In that, there is a components section In that under NVCUDA.DLL it shows NVIDIA CUDA Driver.
It's running fine, I don't think I'm having the issue anymore but I also did turn off GPU Acceleration in "Graphics Settings" on windows when I changed the power plan so that probably was the culprit. I changed power plan back to Ryzen High Performance and now it's working fine (I think)Can't see msi
I would turn off all the yellow and red to test
can be turned back on
Just click to turn off
How is it currently running
Still didn't help, I even underclocked my GPU mem and core by 50Try power back at normal
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.