Gigabyte 3090 Ti Gaming experiences problems each time it restarts.
Gigabyte 3090 Ti Gaming experiences problems each time it restarts.
I recently installed a new PC and am experiencing unstable performance. FPS changes rapidly, leading to game stuttering and poor TimeSpy scores. Scores drop when I reinstall drivers, but everything works fine afterward. The system runs at high load with temperatures under 60°C, CPU operates smoothly, and utilization stays near 100%. After removing MSI afterburner, readings seem normal. Updating drivers and software helps, but the issue persists when I restart or power cycle the machine. I’m using Windows 11, NVidia, chipset, and motherboard BIOS versions. Any advice would be invaluable as this is frustrating. My hardware details are listed here: Mobo: AORUS X570si CPU: Ryzen 5900x RAM: Kingston fury 32GB 3600MHz GPU: Gigabyte RX 3090 Ti Gaming OC.
It seems you're looking to establish a frame per second limit for that game. Some aspects appear more challenging to render compared to others. The advantage of an FPS cap is it generally makes performance more consistent. Recently, someone mentioned their motherboard only supports RAM speeds above 2666 if it has less than 16GB. That’s a restriction I’ve never encountered before, but if it applies to your setup, it could be the reason behind the issue.
I’ll check the RAM speed and skip XMP. Don’t assume it’s limited by FPS. It seems like every restart after reinstalling the driver brings the card back to normal. It might be Windows or the motherboard causing this issue... unless I reinstall the driver again, things should stabilize.
If it doesn't function, it won't. Still, it's simple enough to attempt.
Consider testing the GPU in debug mode. The details are clear.
I restored the RAM to default configurations, verified the motherboard, and confirmed compatibility with 5300mhz speeds up to 64GB per stick. I also configured a frame cap, but the issue persists.
Hi, the debug test ran and the benchmark stayed inconsistent, ending with a low score around 15-20% reduction. The game still shows minor stutters. I was considering testing the card on a friend’s machine to confirm if the issue is similar.
Based on this configuration, I wouldn’t expect the PSU to run at full capacity, especially at 8K resolutions. Look into the power plans in the control panel and verify that the PCIe slot isn’t in a saving mode. If BIOS offers a setting to pick the PCIe version manually, change it to Gen 4.
Check if the card is running low on power. I ran GPUZ with a 3090 Ti to see its performance and power draw. It used 455 watts on a 450-watt system, which is a bit high. I also tracked CPU and motherboard voltages to avoid overheating issues. Spoiler: it’s pushing limits.