It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Ever since I installed guild wars II around two weeks ago my computer seems to freeze which needs a hard reset. This isn't isolated to guild wars 2 anymore but all games that have intensive 3d graphics. At first, I thought I had some sort of virus and wiped my discs clean. Then I updated my cards drivers and even switched to older more stable drivers. But it still happens. I then replaced my GPU and even upgraded my PSU and yet it still seems to freeze. When doing things like browsing the web or playing videos etc. the computer runs like a dream. But when I start playing a game with anything but the lowest setting.. it will - without fail, crash my computer within about 15 minutes and it's driving me nuts. I do not want to spend more money on guesswork, I want to know what the heck is wrong and how I can fix it. I only put it toghether a few months back, my fear is that I either fried the MB or CPU which I can't really afford to replace with christmas comming up and the fact that we need to get a new car. Save me!
My system is:
nvidia geforce gtx 560 ti 1gb
Intel i7 3.5ghz
16 gigabytes of RAM
Gigabyte Z77X-D3H motherboard
Comments
Maibe this is your ram (if your lucky because they are cheap if not.. well).
Have you tried to test each ram alone? you said you have 16 gigs so i will presume you have 4 stick of 4gigs each. So try with only one stick of 4 gigs and if it crash try with another stick and goes on. If it still crashing after test all your stick alone, i will presume this is your motherboard. It happen for me once, my pc was shutting down alot when gaming.
First, before trying any difficult fixes, run NVIDIA System Monitor and write here the clock speeds of your GPU.
560 GTX Ti is often shipped factory overclocked at 900 Mhz -- which is often unstable.
What was the other GPU you tried ?
REALITY CHECK
I've done a stress test for everything but 3d graphics and everything seems fine.
The card I currently have installed is a geforce 550 TI 1GB. Will put the other one in again when I have it sorted. I'll check out Nvidia tools right now.
GPU clock is 951.000 mhz
GPU memory clock is 2178.000 Mhz
GPU processor clock is 1903.000 Mhz
I hope this is useful and many thanks.
This is way OC'ed if the reference board is anything to go by.
http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/graphics/2011/01/25/nvidia-geforce-gtx-560-ti-1gb-review/2
820 Mhz GPU clock
1G MHz memory
Gdemami -
Informing people about your thoughts and impressions is not a review, it's a blog.
My 560 is back in it's box and I'm using the 550ti atm and that was the clocks I posted.
I've downloaded MSI afterburner and kombustion to stress test the GPU and noticed my fan is barely being used dispite the fact that my GPU temp is hiting 80. There seems to be nothing wrong with the fan control since i can manually control it. Whats going on and how do I fix it?
You bought -- superclocked -- GPU. Factory overclocked, however, if you think factory overclocked are stable and tested, you're wrong.
Most of the manufacturers dont even test them.
As I said before -- most probably, your hard crashes are caused by overclocking and subsequently low voltaige on your GPU, open up NVIDIA Control Panel - go - Performance - Device Settings - Set your clocks to 833 Mhz GPU clocks, 2004 Mhz Memory clocks (recommended settings for 560gtx ti) -- save it to your profile and make a rule in Profile Policies so it starts up everytime you start your windows. Check tests for 550 ti for the most stable clocks.
833 / 2004 is actually GPU recommended settings - which means, any other clocks are at your own risk, despite the fact that the clocks were overclocked by the manufacturer.
80C is no problem for your GPU.
REALITY CHECK
As others have said, if you've got overclocked hardware and are seeing symptoms consistent with an unstable overclock, try undoing the overclock.
What power supply do you have, and what case? You said that you replaced your power supply, but replacing one cheap junk part by another isn't necessarily an upgrade.
Velika: City of Wheels: Among the mortal races, the humans were the only one that never built cities or great empires; a curse laid upon them by their creator, Gidd, forced them to wander as nomads for twenty centuries...
So you built this system yourself? Can you try switching the memory around or try combinations of 8GB at a time. Also, inspect the to see if any pins got bent when you installed the CPU.
Epic Music: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vAigCvelkhQ&list=PLo9FRw1AkDuQLEz7Gvvaz3ideB2NpFtT1
https://archive.org/details/softwarelibrary_msdos?&sort=-downloads&page=1
Kyleran: "Now there's the real trick, learning to accept and enjoy a game for what it offers rather than pass on what might be a great playing experience because it lacks a few features you prefer."
John Henry Newman: "A man would do nothing if he waited until he could do it so well that no one could find fault."
FreddyNoNose: "A good game needs no defense; a bad game has no defense." "Easily digested content is just as easily forgotten."
LacedOpium: "So the question that begs to be asked is, if you are not interested in the game mechanics that define the MMORPG genre, then why are you playing an MMORPG?"
Yeah, I built it myself and it's my first build since I got fed up with crappy HP and Dell computers. I was going to get an alienware but since I heard that vuilding one was cheap and fairly easy I gave it a go.
As for the case and PSU I have a Sharkoon T28 ATX midi tower and the most recent PSU I bought was... I'll copy and paste it..
OCZ OCZ600MXSP-UK ModXStream Pro 600W ATX Power Supply
I'll try and lowering my GPU clock speed and if this doesn't work, I'll just send in a pro since I've just about tried everything else that has been suggested. Funny though, I never bought either of my GPU's with overclocked. It didn't say it was overclocked on the website or overclocked on the bo box and I certainly didn't overclock it. Anyway, thanks a bunch for your help guys.
Your case should have adequate airflow for a GeForce GTX 560 Ti. Your power supply is decent but not great, but I wouldn't expect it to be unable to handle your hardware.
You could also check system memory, as others have said. You've got 16 GB, which is vastly more than you need, so it's easy to pull out one module at a time and see if the crash recurs. Or better yet, two at a time, so that it only takes two passes and you can still have 8 GB with properly matched channels. If pulling out one particular memory module makes the problems go away, you've found the culprit.
Alternatively, you could check your system memory with memtest86+. Leave it running for an extended period of time and see if it turns up any problems.
It is a common problem with 560 ti and 550 ti cards, if they're shipped overclocked or superclocked. I'm surprised you didnt try that first actually, because it can be tested easily.
REALITY CHECK
Bad stick of ram. Some company's have lifetime warranties, so check before you she'll out some cash.put in 1 stick at a time and turn on the comp. it starts, do again until you crash at boot
70 monk eq1
80 bruiser eq2
43 druid wow
Currently playing : rift
I would check the temp of your cpu and make sure its getting good airflow. GW2 is a VERY cpu intensive game. No matter what cpu you have its going to stress it and put alot of load onto it.
This could explain why you are having troubles even getting windows to load sometimes. My bet is on your cpu overheating and causing you problems. How and what type of thermal paste did you use and how did you apply it to the cpu. Improper application onto a I7 (a cpu that runs hot) can easily lead to it overheating.
I have 16gb of memory and it has never been passed 70%.
The DX thing is something worth checking though, but I installed DX earlier.
I ran a stress test for about an hour, all cores at 100% and the temp didn't go above 45c. I pulled this computer apart, checking everything, from lose screws and bent pins and and dusts and even updating bios. I also stressed tested CPU, memory HDD and of course GPU. I'm pretty satisfied I eliminated all the usual hardware suspects so it has to be software,
I just cleared my disk for the 3rd time and without GW2 on my system, I've been running 3d stress tests without any problems. and later when I have time I will play a few games to test it.. But I bet my last penny if I install GW2 it will start crashing again. So the only explanation I can think of is that GW2 changes something my computer doesn't agree with.