F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Does PC crash without overheating?

Does PC crash without overheating?

Does PC crash without overheating?

M
michael12463
Junior Member
39
07-07-2016, 06:25 AM
#1
So in the past five days my PC has been experiencing crashes while playing games—especially during raids in WoW, sometimes in Overwatch, and regularly in Fortnite after about 30 to 35 minutes of play.
I have a 1050 TI, an i5 3550, 8 gigabytes of DDR3 RAM, and a 450W power supply unit whose brand I’m not sure about (though I know it’s probably not worth throwing away).
With my friend we completely wiped all the data from a 250GB Samsung SSD (he connected it to his Linux machine and erased everything), then reinstalled Windows. We then ran several benchmarks for both CPU and GPU, and the PC performed well—no crashes, GPU reached up to 78°C, CPU up to 72°C—so we thought the issue was resolved.
Then I reinstalled Fortnite, and after about 40 minutes the PC shut down again.
As you probably can tell, I’m not very familiar with computers, but I asked several people who know how to fix things, and they all didn’t understand what was going on.
Anyone else know what might be causing this or what steps I could take to figure it out?
M
michael12463
07-07-2016, 06:25 AM #1

So in the past five days my PC has been experiencing crashes while playing games—especially during raids in WoW, sometimes in Overwatch, and regularly in Fortnite after about 30 to 35 minutes of play.
I have a 1050 TI, an i5 3550, 8 gigabytes of DDR3 RAM, and a 450W power supply unit whose brand I’m not sure about (though I know it’s probably not worth throwing away).
With my friend we completely wiped all the data from a 250GB Samsung SSD (he connected it to his Linux machine and erased everything), then reinstalled Windows. We then ran several benchmarks for both CPU and GPU, and the PC performed well—no crashes, GPU reached up to 78°C, CPU up to 72°C—so we thought the issue was resolved.
Then I reinstalled Fortnite, and after about 40 minutes the PC shut down again.
As you probably can tell, I’m not very familiar with computers, but I asked several people who know how to fix things, and they all didn’t understand what was going on.
Anyone else know what might be causing this or what steps I could take to figure it out?

S
Saintrow9345
Member
213
07-13-2016, 04:56 AM
#2
It might be another issue, honestly. I’ve got a solid system that kept crashing because of outdated GPU drivers, especially with BF 2042. Before I ran into problems with 3200Mhz RAM on an older 1600x Ryzen, maybe you should consider upgrading your PSU. If you’re not ready to replace it yet, try using MSI afterburner and increase the fan speeds to help cool the GPU a bit more and draw a bit more power. If it still crashes, it could point to a faulty PSU, but if it doesn’t, the GPU might need a fresh paste or cleaning.
S
Saintrow9345
07-13-2016, 04:56 AM #2

It might be another issue, honestly. I’ve got a solid system that kept crashing because of outdated GPU drivers, especially with BF 2042. Before I ran into problems with 3200Mhz RAM on an older 1600x Ryzen, maybe you should consider upgrading your PSU. If you’re not ready to replace it yet, try using MSI afterburner and increase the fan speeds to help cool the GPU a bit more and draw a bit more power. If it still crashes, it could point to a faulty PSU, but if it doesn’t, the GPU might need a fresh paste or cleaning.

Z
zamys
Senior Member
690
07-15-2016, 01:11 AM
#3
the brand and model of this 450w psu are unclear.
Z
zamys
07-15-2016, 01:11 AM #3

the brand and model of this 450w psu are unclear.

D
Dumzzy
Member
54
07-15-2016, 01:21 AM
#4
Actually, it's not even 450W—it's 280W. It's an FSP GROUP model FSP280-40EPA (or at least that's what the side says). I'm sorry if I sound like an idiot; I really don't know much about this stuff.
D
Dumzzy
07-15-2016, 01:21 AM #4

Actually, it's not even 450W—it's 280W. It's an FSP GROUP model FSP280-40EPA (or at least that's what the side says). I'm sorry if I sound like an idiot; I really don't know much about this stuff.

G
Gustavgurra03
Posting Freak
815
07-15-2016, 04:37 AM
#5
The minimum PSU requirement for the 1050 Ti is between 300-350 watts. It might be worth looking for a replacement. This could be the problem.
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Gustavgurra03
07-15-2016, 04:37 AM #5

The minimum PSU requirement for the 1050 Ti is between 300-350 watts. It might be worth looking for a replacement. This could be the problem.

R
rebelzeina
Member
110
07-15-2016, 05:17 AM
#6
I understand, I'll attempt a different PSU but I've had the PC for five years without issues, and it didn't crash during all the tests.
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rebelzeina
07-15-2016, 05:17 AM #6

I understand, I'll attempt a different PSU but I've had the PC for five years without issues, and it didn't crash during all the tests.

G
glenroi
Member
164
07-15-2016, 05:48 AM
#7
Did you execute both benchmarks concurrently?
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glenroi
07-15-2016, 05:48 AM #7

Did you execute both benchmarks concurrently?

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Viizion_PvPz
Senior Member
670
07-15-2016, 11:35 PM
#8
I didn't think of that... I'll attempt to clean it up and swap out the PSU, hoping it works again.
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Viizion_PvPz
07-15-2016, 11:35 PM #8

I didn't think of that... I'll attempt to clean it up and swap out the PSU, hoping it works again.

Y
Yukiioross
Member
65
07-16-2016, 05:26 AM
#9
It might be another issue, honestly. I’ve got a solid system that kept crashing because of outdated GPU drivers, especially when trying to run 3200Mhz RAM with an older 1600x Ryzen. If you’re not ready to invest in a new PSU yet, consider using MSI Afterburner and increasing the fan speeds to help cool the GPU and draw more power. If it still crashes, it could point to a faulty PSU; otherwise, a fresh paste might be the fix.
Y
Yukiioross
07-16-2016, 05:26 AM #9

It might be another issue, honestly. I’ve got a solid system that kept crashing because of outdated GPU drivers, especially when trying to run 3200Mhz RAM with an older 1600x Ryzen. If you’re not ready to invest in a new PSU yet, consider using MSI Afterburner and increasing the fan speeds to help cool the GPU and draw more power. If it still crashes, it could point to a faulty PSU; otherwise, a fresh paste might be the fix.

1
10ukkie10
Member
180
07-17-2016, 04:42 AM
#10
Completed the task successfully, but it crashed after 30 minutes in Overwatch using high video settings. The last check showed it stopped about 2 minutes before failure, and the temperature was 55 degrees with the fan set to 80.
1
10ukkie10
07-17-2016, 04:42 AM #10

Completed the task successfully, but it crashed after 30 minutes in Overwatch using high video settings. The last check showed it stopped about 2 minutes before failure, and the temperature was 55 degrees with the fan set to 80.