F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Does the RTX 4060 Ti experience a loud crash during basic operations on both Ubuntu and Windows 11?

Does the RTX 4060 Ti experience a loud crash during basic operations on both Ubuntu and Windows 11?

Does the RTX 4060 Ti experience a loud crash during basic operations on both Ubuntu and Windows 11?

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opticgunship
Posting Freak
815
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM
#11
Another odd occurrence, when the pc boots I need to disconnect the cable from the GPU, otherwise it won't start. I see a black screen and nothing. I unplug the cable and then Linux launches. Once the cable is connected again, everything works fine. Well... as well as it can be.... Could this be a compatibility issue? I only have one screen, an HDMI port on the motherboard card and a DisplayPort i GEForce. Does this make sense?
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opticgunship
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM #11

Another odd occurrence, when the pc boots I need to disconnect the cable from the GPU, otherwise it won't start. I see a black screen and nothing. I unplug the cable and then Linux launches. Once the cable is connected again, everything works fine. Well... as well as it can be.... Could this be a compatibility issue? I only have one screen, an HDMI port on the motherboard card and a DisplayPort i GEForce. Does this make sense?

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BlazeBrad123
Junior Member
21
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM
#12
The cable problem seems unusual. Check your BIOS settings to see if there are any preferences for motherboard graphics versus the card. Also, look into slot or memory allocation settings—something might be causing interference.

Another approach is to install the latest NVidia drivers; they likely include CUDA 12.7 and possibly a newer version. It's possible the drivers bundled with Ubuntu aren't updated enough for your card.
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BlazeBrad123
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM #12

The cable problem seems unusual. Check your BIOS settings to see if there are any preferences for motherboard graphics versus the card. Also, look into slot or memory allocation settings—something might be causing interference.

Another approach is to install the latest NVidia drivers; they likely include CUDA 12.7 and possibly a newer version. It's possible the drivers bundled with Ubuntu aren't updated enough for your card.

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fwkenxz
Member
64
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM
#13
Also, confirm you're interpreting the second screenshot correctly? The Nvidia-smi seems to be rejecting connection, which strongly suggests a card crash. Any dmesg output accessible could provide further clues. You can check this by running a terminal with dmesg enabled. Another approach is using "nvtop" for more detailed info.
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fwkenxz
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM #13

Also, confirm you're interpreting the second screenshot correctly? The Nvidia-smi seems to be rejecting connection, which strongly suggests a card crash. Any dmesg output accessible could provide further clues. You can check this by running a terminal with dmesg enabled. Another approach is using "nvtop" for more detailed info.

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Nienke_2002
Senior Member
621
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM
#14
The GPU connection fails, displaying "GPU is lost."
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Nienke_2002
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM #14

The GPU connection fails, displaying "GPU is lost."

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_Hobo_
Member
84
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM
#15
The message indicates an issue with the system program and inquires if you wish to report it.
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_Hobo_
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM #15

The message indicates an issue with the system program and inquires if you wish to report it.

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KT_Jason
Junior Member
15
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM
#16
It seems nvtop is experiencing an issue with your AMD driver, unrelated to GeForce shutdown. The "GPU is lost" warning is unfamiliar, but it may occur with NVidia cards that overheat. A forum post discusses using a server GPU without a fan; you have a fan (three in total), but it might be similar—follow the same steps and compare temperature logs with the other user's experience. Also, verify the card for any obstructions, such as sticky tape blocking the heatsink.
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KT_Jason
08-02-2025, 02:44 PM #16

It seems nvtop is experiencing an issue with your AMD driver, unrelated to GeForce shutdown. The "GPU is lost" warning is unfamiliar, but it may occur with NVidia cards that overheat. A forum post discusses using a server GPU without a fan; you have a fan (three in total), but it might be similar—follow the same steps and compare temperature logs with the other user's experience. Also, verify the card for any obstructions, such as sticky tape blocking the heatsink.

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