
It was worrisome that after your computer crashed, the fans then went full speed.
If you are crashing from heat it may be because the BIOS is not handling your fan speeds correctly. You may be able to fix it by installing SpeedFan and specifically setting your fan speed(s) to max, at least when you intend to play games...
There may be an option in your BIOS that allows better fan controll as well.
THere have been cases of BIOSes and GPU drivers that improperly handle the fan and cause such problems.
The actual allowed temps are of course CPU and GPU specific. I.e. my GTX480 (a 230 watt beast of yore) runs at 80-90C with dual monitors when playing Skyrim and that is "normal". The CPU runs at about 45C. Never had any heat related issues...
It was worrisome that after your computer crashed, the fans then went full speed.
If you are crashing from heat it may be because the BIOS is not handling your fan speeds correctly. You may be able to fix it by installing SpeedFan and specifically setting your fan speed(s) to max, at least when you intend to play games...
There may be an option in your BIOS that allows better fan controll as well.
THere have been cases of BIOSes and GPU drivers that improperly handle the fan and cause such problems.
The actual allowed temps are of course CPU and GPU specific. I.e. my GTX480 (a 230 watt beast of yore) runs at 80-90C with dual monitors when playing Skyrim and that is "normal". The CPU runs at about 45C. Never had any heat related issues...
Ok.. Yeah if it's crashing /instantly/, then it's likely not heat, or atleast not heat any more...
Either software (Drivers) or hardware that's gone bad, after all your testing the only hardware I'd suspect is the video card itself atm.
You have any alternative video cards you could swap in for a bit?
Ok.. Yeah if it's crashing /instantly/, then it's likely not heat, or atleast not heat any more...
Either software (Drivers) or hardware that's gone bad, after all your testing the only hardware I'd suspect is the video card itself atm.
You have any alternative video cards you could swap in for a bit?
no i dont , would integrated motherboards graphics surfice?
Ok.. Yeah if it's crashing /instantly/, then it's likely not heat, or atleast not heat any more...
Either software (Drivers) or hardware that's gone bad, after all your testing the only hardware I'd suspect is the video card itself atm.
You have any alternative video cards you could swap in for a bit?
no i dont , would integrated motherboards graphics surfice?
Well not as good no. You probably would not even be able to run the gameand it really would be nice to run the same drviers you have installed but on a different card from the same manufacturer to attempt to isolate the card or not. However it wouldn't hurt to try.
Another thing to try (do a search on the forms here) is to do a COMPLETE uninstall of all the video drivers. Get yourself back to an 800x600 VGA driver that comes with windows, then reinstall new driver completely clean...
no i dont , would integrated motherboards graphics surfice?
Well not as good no. You probably would not even be able to run the gameand it really would be nice to run the same drviers you have installed but on a different card from the same manufacturer to attempt to isolate the card or not. However it wouldn't hurt to try.
Another thing to try (do a search on the forms here) is to do a COMPLETE uninstall of all the video drivers. Get yourself back to an 800x600 VGA driver that comes with windows, then reinstall new driver completely clean...
okay ill have alook
Well.. you said you were getting weird color issues on screen? Trying the driver sweeper and reinstall are the free and easy things to try, but eventually it just may be that the card is dying.
Given enough power cycles and heat stress of warming and cooling, coupled with the horrible RHOS solder used today, it's super common to have chips pop their "pins" from the circuit board. And depending on random heat/stress it may work fine for a while then warm up and lose contact and die.
There are some sketchy posts on the web about how to "reflow" the boards in your oven. Probably a very small chance that it would work or not make things worse. But if the card is really dead... (And out of warrenty)
THis is where you need a good similar card to trade out to determine once and for all though.
If you are seeing color problems on screen and the card is under warrenty, I'd just try returning it at this point![]()
98% sure my problem is all drivers. I can run heaven benchmark completely fine , but i cant run counter strike source for more then a minute. Waiting until nvidia releases a new driver until i ride it off as hardware and send it for repairs.
I'd suggest that you first backup your stuff and then make sure you've got access to another computer so you can contact us if problems arise. Then make a System Restore point (so you can restore the system using the Vista/Win7 Startup Repair feature).
In Windows 7 you can make a Startup Repair disk by going to Start....All Programs...Maintenance...Create a System Repair Disc - with Windows Vista you'll have to use your installation disk or the "Repair your computer" option at the top of the Safe Mode menu .
Then, here's the procedure:
- Go to Start and type in "verifier" (without the quotes) and press Enter
- Select "Create custom settings (for code developers)" and click "Next"
- Select "Select individual settings from a full list" and click "Next"
- Select everything EXCEPT FOR "Low Resource Simulation" and click "Next"
- Select "Select driver names from a list" and click "Next"
Then select all drivers NOT provided by Microsoft and click "Next"
- Select "Finish" on the next page.
Reboot the system and wait for it to crash to the Blue Screen. Continue to use your system normally, and if you know what causes the crash, do that repeatedly. The objective here is to get the system to crash because Driver Verifier is stressing the drivers out. If it doesn't crash for you, then let it run for at least 36 hours of continuous operation (an estimate on my part).
If you can't get into Windows because it crashes too soon, try it in Safe Mode.
If you can't get into Safe Mode, try using System Restore from your installation DVD to set the system back to the previous restore point that you created.