Steam telepítése
belépés
|
nyelv
简体中文 (egyszerűsített kínai)
繁體中文 (hagyományos kínai)
日本語 (japán)
한국어 (koreai)
ไทย (thai)
Български (bolgár)
Čeština (cseh)
Dansk (dán)
Deutsch (német)
English (angol)
Español - España (spanyolországi spanyol)
Español - Latinoamérica (latin-amerikai spanyol)
Ελληνικά (görög)
Français (francia)
Italiano (olasz)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonéz)
Nederlands (holland)
Norsk (norvég)
Polski (lengyel)
Português (portugáliai portugál)
Português - Brasil (brazíliai portugál)
Română (román)
Русский (orosz)
Suomi (finn)
Svenska (svéd)
Türkçe (török)
Tiếng Việt (vietnámi)
Українська (ukrán)
Fordítási probléma jelentése
Alright, thanks. It just seems odd though.
Below 60*C though; not having GPU fans kicking in really is fine though. As that is not hot for that. Overall they stand by the designs of the cards, so if you have an issue from a new product, try to make sure of that early on and if need be, get it replaced right away if not doing as it should. I mean I could play GTAV all day long without exiting it, and never have a dual or triple fan-based NVIDIA GTX 1060 or even better GPU and not go above 70-75*C; so really that is fine. If it's actually hitting 83-85*C+ then yes something is wrong, either the fan curve is not set well enough and/or you lack good Case Airflow overall. The main two I'm using (980 Ti and 1070 are both liquid cooled though, so those stay well below 60*C at max loads); but yea I've used and tested many others.
Good idea to always read up on any new Motherboard or GPU you plan to get, so you understand the involved factors such as this, ahead of time prior to purchase.
Humm, strange, whenever I shine a flash-light into my rig I can clearly see them not spinning.
All good advise, thank you.
I admit, I am rather new to these sort of things. I'm abit of an old timer when it comes to PCs (been using em' since the '90s) so these new GPUs and things are all alien tech to me. I always figured GPU fans would run on startup like they did back in the old days or heh... 'Dark Ages' of tech as I like to call it.
I never had a computer like this before with that said.
By the way, there is no liquid cooling for my rig but the temps seem to be stable.
I have a 1070 and a 1080 and both the fans run non stop while gaming. I do have custom fan profiles though.
Have you monitored your temps?
I have not done that but I should... my game does stutter here and there somertimes. Could be a sign of overheating perhaps?
Asus STRIX or the latest EVGA with ACX Cooler do that on purpose, for zero noise, using the huge heatsink to draw away the heat instead. You can use they graphics card app to adjust this fan curve accordingly to what you need/want in your PC case.
For example: If you need low area airflow for the other component, have the graphic card fans always on instead. Else just adjust the temperature to speed ratio to a smooth flow.
Alright, well, um, mine is a MSI GeForce GTX 1070 apparently.
Can you tell me anything about it? Sorry, I feel like such a 'tard right now.
Now click monitoring at the top, under graph deselect everything (unless you want to leave some on like temperature, I uncheck all), then set hardware polling period to 60000 milliseconds (as high as it goes, use less like 5 second intervals if you're using any monitoring graph). Click ok.
Optional for overclocking, under general tab use kernel mode (low level hw access interface) and whichever version your card is from the unlock voltage control drop down. I have mine set to start with windows but I have 'apply overclocking at system startup' unchecked just in case I go too far overclocking, it won't boot with the bad clocks applied.
Nah man, it's good you noticed and questioned it.
MSI GeForce GTX 1070 uses TORX 2.0 fans.
These work mostly on increasing air pressure for the flow. It will use the TWIN FROZR VI heat pipes to direct the heat away from the graphics card to the heatsink, even when the fans are off.
Completely silent during idle, multimedia or light gaming if the temperature is below 60 degrees (by default).
If you want to adjust this, use the appication called "MSI Afterburner"
https://www.msi.com/page/afterburner
It's for overclocking, but suggest just ignoring that part and adjusting the fan curve, if desired. Setup a custom fan profile under that. It will depend on your own PC case and room temperature, etc, to what is the best settings to use.
Humm, so that would explain everything then. I feel a little more at ease now. I have downloaded Afterburner and the temps are 35-47C. It's remained there for about an hour of play now. This thing is cool as ice apparently...
Strangely I still get stuttering here and there though.
If you need any more information on my rig and what you could possibly tell me about it I use a rig by MSI themselves; their Aegis model. I've look around the best that I can but maybe there's something you guys know that I might have missed.
Many thanks to all, it's well appreciated.
What is your monitor model? Resolution? Refresh rate?
Do you have V-SYNC enabled?
Not using Nvidia DSR (Dynamic Super Resolution) or Windows Resolution Scaling?
GTX 1070 should be ideal for 1440p resolution and not stutter at all even on very high settings. If you are using "GeForce Experience" with the graphics card, add the steam folder and other game folders, then apply optimal settings to each game, but ensure the resolution is native rather than DSR (higher resolution which then gets down sampled to the monitor).
You can get the latest drivers from:
http://www.geforce.com/drivers
AOC 2269W apparently from what Device Manager says.
Native resolution is 1920 x 1080 (it says it's recommended to be at that setting so I figure it'd be it) Refresh rate is 60 Ghz
V-Sync is on yes.
Not sure how I access those settings to be honest, I'm in Nvidia Control panel but don't see those options anywhere. To be honest, I've been a Radeon guy, just recently switched over To Nividia once I got this new rig so I'm very new with these kinds of cards.
You can also use Afterburner's in built monitoring for GPU stats such as temps, fan RPM, FPS, frame-time, etc. Once you figure out what temps your card hovers at, then it can be rather easy to adjust your fan profile appropriately.
You can also have the stats displayed in-game, makes monitoring real easy. Although, recent Afterburner executables don't come bundled with MSI RivaTuner, which is needed for in-game overlay. You can download it here -- http://www.guru3d.com/files-details/rtss-rivatuner-statistics-server-download.html
Setting it up is rather easy, and you can turn it on/off with a key-combination. Its a nice monitoring overlay.