Інсталювати Steam
увійти
|
мова
简体中文 (спрощена китайська)
繁體中文 (традиційна китайська)
日本語 (японська)
한국어 (корейська)
ไทย (тайська)
Български (болгарська)
Čeština (чеська)
Dansk (данська)
Deutsch (німецька)
English (англійська)
Español - España (іспанська — Іспанія)
Español - Latinoamérica (іспанська — Латинська Америка)
Ελληνικά (грецька)
Français (французька)
Italiano (італійська)
Bahasa Indonesia (індонезійська)
Magyar (угорська)
Nederlands (нідерландська)
Norsk (норвезька)
Polski (польська)
Português (португальська — Португалія)
Português - Brasil (португальська — Бразилія)
Română (румунська)
Русский (російська)
Suomi (фінська)
Svenska (шведська)
Türkçe (турецька)
Tiếng Việt (в’єтнамська)
Повідомити про проблему з перекладом
better gpu = more load on the cpu but the fx is good enough to feed a gtx 1050 ti easy...
you did reinstall the gpu drivers right?
Edit the GTX570 tricked my eyes but I still say the GTX1050ti is really an entry level card by todays standards.
I don't know what games you play but nvidia latest 4xx drivers haven't been kind to GTX10xx gpus in a variety of games like SE4, RoTR I'm staying on 3xx until the coast is clear.
https://www.youtube.com/user/Brudavaloredge/videos
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCP1sR-BkesldLQcYJ0TgF5g/videos
A lot of info on ^ what an FX can or can't do but mostly it can.
Did you install and run DDU in safe mode to remove all GPU driver files and then reinstall the driver? Usually that fixes any driver-related issue, and that's what it sounds like.
Motherboard and cooler would have next to nothing to do with it, and a 1050 Ti would not push an FX 8320 to overheat.
maybe not in regards to a gtx 1050 ti but if his board and cooler are crap his mosfet and cpu throttle under load...
No, it simply doesn't make sense that it would only happen after upgrading to a new GPU. Literally everyone else has been saying to run DDU and freshly install the driver.
The FX-8320 doesn't hinder the 1050 Ti, as OP reported no FPS issues but just crashing, and the issues with crashing is consistent with a driver issue. An issue with another component would have triggered before with the GTX 570 and it would be more than just a few games crashing, the entire system would be unstable.
No it does make sense cause regardless of previous gpu, you should wipe out the Nvidia stuff completely after a swap. While gpu drivers are unified the person would be on highly outdated drivers coming from gtx 570 since after v391, the 400 and 500 series are no longer supported. For gtx 10XX series you want a clean install of a 4xx.xx version driver suite. Why is this so hard to do, it literally takes all of less than 5 mins to run ddu, select safe mode, restart. When ddu pops up click nvidia from drop down menu, select Clean and Restart....done. Then once back in Windows Desktop, download 417 or whatever is latest and install it. Reboot when done.
I was talking about 123 saying that it's his motherboard or cpu throttling that's causing games to crash even though they run at high FPS.