Vid Card Install, Borked My Comp? (Anyone Tech Savvy That Can Help Me Out?)
#41
Posted 27 September 2018 - 04:20 PM
And what game settings are you using, including what AA?
#42
Posted 27 September 2018 - 09:39 PM
For example, you could have a PCI card that works perfectly in one motherboard, but not in another motherboard of the exact same model. I've always chalked it up to inconsistencies in the manufacturing process of one of the involved parts, or damage that was unable to be seen, but enough to cause issues.
#43
Posted 28 September 2018 - 12:03 AM
https://www.techpowerup.com/gpuz/?
would be also interesting what that program says about the R7 360 when put into the other pcie slot
#44
Posted 28 September 2018 - 07:24 AM
I rolled back to the 3.99 from august 1st.. Hopefully that solves the issue, but if anyone has a driver that works well for them just in case that one has issues, but i'm hoping not.
#45
Posted 30 September 2018 - 12:21 AM
I would have suspected issues with the AMD/Radoen driver being quirky.
AMD/Radeon drivers have given me a lot of trouble over the years in both Windows systems and Linux...especially Linux and others.
I usually set up my computers to dual-boot Linux and whatever Win system (using Win7 Ultimate currently for MWO and general Windows type stuff).
AMD video drivers have been such a pain that I stick with Nvidia now because they seem to do a much better job of QA/testing than AMD does and 'it just works' on every OS I've used. (At one time a fair while back I had 7 different OS'es installed across 2 HDDs, among them Solaris, FreeBSD/NetBSD/OpenBSD, and even an old one from Bell Labs called 'Plan 9'.
It seems like AMD drivers either like your system hardware and work, or else either won't work at all or they'll have weird issues.
Glad to hear you got things sorted.
Edited by BlueStrat, 30 September 2018 - 12:40 AM.
#46
Posted 30 September 2018 - 02:01 AM
1) Weak or degraded power supply. Restart after boot points to this problem.
2) One of power phase short circuiting in video card itself. Faulty power transistor can cause this problem. This puts power supply to safe mode.
3) Unstable or even faulty GPU. I had one and it caused many different problems, such as driver errors, slower computer performance, etc.
#47
Posted 03 October 2018 - 03:05 AM
MrMadguy, on 30 September 2018 - 02:01 AM, said:
1) Weak or degraded power supply. Restart after boot points to this problem.
2) One of power phase short circuiting in video card itself. Faulty power transistor can cause this problem. This puts power supply to safe mode.
3) Unstable or even faulty GPU. I had one and it caused many different problems, such as driver errors, slower computer performance, etc.
Speaking of "unstable GPU", my GPU is a Zotac 1080GTX. The only game that crashes on my rig now is MWO. And the pattern of crashing is for now very consistent. Here's how it goes:
1) Boot PC.
2) Fire up Chrome.
3) Fire up MWO.
4) Log into MWO, drop into a match or hit testing grounds.
5) About 10 seconds into the 3D environment, game crashes with either a MWO failure with option to report, or a D3D Device Removed error, with safe crash to desktop.
6) Restart MWO, no crash for the remainder of the session which could be 2-3 hrs long.
These days I'll purposely fire up testing grounds the first thing I do, and it crashes guaranteed, then I restart MWO. Go figure.
#48
Posted 03 October 2018 - 03:12 AM
Rebooting the system clears memory/cache.
Edited by Tarl Cabot, 03 October 2018 - 03:18 AM.
#49
Posted 03 October 2018 - 03:33 AM
Tarl Cabot, on 03 October 2018 - 03:12 AM, said:
Rebooting the system clears memory/cache.
Mech - different.
Reboot - no reboots, safe crash to desktop, immediate client restart.
Some asset thing perhaps? I now recall that it also happens if my 1st match is Canyon or any map that doesn't have the drop animation and the map renders behind the lobby screen.
#50
Posted 03 October 2018 - 05:38 AM
BlueStrat, on 30 September 2018 - 12:21 AM, said:
I would have suspected issues with the AMD/Radoen driver being quirky.
AMD/Radeon drivers have given me a lot of trouble over the years in both Windows systems and Linux...especially Linux and others.
I usually set up my computers to dual-boot Linux and whatever Win system (using Win7 Ultimate currently for MWO and general Windows type stuff).
AMD video drivers have been such a pain that I stick with Nvidia now because they seem to do a much better job of QA/testing than AMD does and 'it just works' on every OS I've used. (At one time a fair while back I had 7 different OS'es installed across 2 HDDs, among them Solaris, FreeBSD/NetBSD/OpenBSD, and even an old one from Bell Labs called 'Plan 9'.
It seems like AMD drivers either like your system hardware and work, or else either won't work at all or they'll have weird issues.
Glad to hear you got things sorted.
And the reality is that its been Nvidia the last 2 years that had the most driver issues
#51
Posted 03 October 2018 - 06:18 AM
dwwolf, on 03 October 2018 - 05:38 AM, said:
Maybe so, as I haven't been upgrading hardware and haven't had opportunities to compare for quite a while. For many years previous, however, AMD drivers were very quirky. A lot of trust was lost.
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