F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Issues persist even after upgrading the CPU.

Issues persist even after upgrading the CPU.

Issues persist even after upgrading the CPU.

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poler199
Member
74
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM
#1
I upgraded to the Ryzen 9 5900X to ease some stutter issues, though it hasn’t eliminated them completely. Occasional stutters still appear, but they’re not too bothersome. I rarely hit a stable 144fps; performance tends to vary. The games that cause the most problems are Battlefield II, Battlefield 1, and Battlefield V. Stuttering seems to improve in Star Wars: Battlefront II, possibly because of the game settings. I suspect my RAM might be the culprit—being one of the few components from my original build 6 years ago. I plan to replace it soon, hoping it’ll help. It’s possible the issue lies with my SSD or M.2 drive since everything else functions normally. When gaming, I enable VSync in the Radeon software and switch it off during gameplay for smoother play. I’ve tried toggling freesync in AMD software and disabling it in BIOS, but results are minimal. I also have SAM enabled and Ftmp turned off in BIOS; Xmas is active. My system specs are: Ryzen 9 5900X, RX 6750 XT, Intel 3600, PCIe 4.0, 2x8 GPUs, ASUS B550F gaming, and an ASUS Thor 850 Platinum with 80+ Gold certification. I’ve removed drivers multiple times, reinstalled chipset drivers, and updated BIOS several times; temperatures remain stable.
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poler199
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM #1

I upgraded to the Ryzen 9 5900X to ease some stutter issues, though it hasn’t eliminated them completely. Occasional stutters still appear, but they’re not too bothersome. I rarely hit a stable 144fps; performance tends to vary. The games that cause the most problems are Battlefield II, Battlefield 1, and Battlefield V. Stuttering seems to improve in Star Wars: Battlefront II, possibly because of the game settings. I suspect my RAM might be the culprit—being one of the few components from my original build 6 years ago. I plan to replace it soon, hoping it’ll help. It’s possible the issue lies with my SSD or M.2 drive since everything else functions normally. When gaming, I enable VSync in the Radeon software and switch it off during gameplay for smoother play. I’ve tried toggling freesync in AMD software and disabling it in BIOS, but results are minimal. I also have SAM enabled and Ftmp turned off in BIOS; Xmas is active. My system specs are: Ryzen 9 5900X, RX 6750 XT, Intel 3600, PCIe 4.0, 2x8 GPUs, ASUS B550F gaming, and an ASUS Thor 850 Platinum with 80+ Gold certification. I’ve removed drivers multiple times, reinstalled chipset drivers, and updated BIOS several times; temperatures remain stable.

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myworldisbest
Junior Member
15
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM
#2
ah, ok, but thats not how one would do this usually... i would strongly recommend to not to change anything in the radeon software , reset, reinstall, dont touch it.. no, please reset BIOS and dont touch it again ... happy easter!?
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myworldisbest
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM #2

ah, ok, but thats not how one would do this usually... i would strongly recommend to not to change anything in the radeon software , reset, reinstall, dont touch it.. no, please reset BIOS and dont touch it again ... happy easter!?

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TeunFTW
Junior Member
39
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM
#3
It’s best not to lower your GPU’s MHz below its maximum. Resetting the BIOS might remove features like XMP or SAM, which could affect performance.
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TeunFTW
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM #3

It’s best not to lower your GPU’s MHz below its maximum. Resetting the BIOS might remove features like XMP or SAM, which could affect performance.

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OldManIceCubes
Junior Member
41
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM
#4
Yes, XMP should be activated.
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OldManIceCubes
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM #4

Yes, XMP should be activated.

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Kazumi_Makoto
Member
90
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM
#5
I followed all your advice and didn’t make any changes. My RAM stayed at 2133MHz instead of the expected 3600MHz. I didn’t modify the AMD drivers or the BIOS settings. As expected, it performed poorly. After that, I enabled SAM and then XMP, which improved things a bit but wasn’t ideal. The low-frequency issues remained problematic. I turned off FTPM, which made it run better. I’ll test this in other games but need to wait before reinstalling because I’ve done a fresh Windows 11 install.
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Kazumi_Makoto
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM #5

I followed all your advice and didn’t make any changes. My RAM stayed at 2133MHz instead of the expected 3600MHz. I didn’t modify the AMD drivers or the BIOS settings. As expected, it performed poorly. After that, I enabled SAM and then XMP, which improved things a bit but wasn’t ideal. The low-frequency issues remained problematic. I turned off FTPM, which made it run better. I’ll test this in other games but need to wait before reinstalling because I’ve done a fresh Windows 11 install.

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LeleCamera
Junior Member
36
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM
#6
I followed all your advice and didn’t make any changes. My RAM stayed at 2133MHz instead of the expected 3600MHz. I didn’t modify the AMD drivers or the BIOS settings. As expected, it performed poorly. After that, I enabled SAM and then XMP, which improved things a bit but wasn’t ideal. The low-frequency issues remained problematic. I turned off FTPM, which made it run better. I’ll test this in other games but need to wait before reinstalling because I’ve done a fresh Windows 11 install.
L
LeleCamera
05-07-2024, 04:24 PM #6

I followed all your advice and didn’t make any changes. My RAM stayed at 2133MHz instead of the expected 3600MHz. I didn’t modify the AMD drivers or the BIOS settings. As expected, it performed poorly. After that, I enabled SAM and then XMP, which improved things a bit but wasn’t ideal. The low-frequency issues remained problematic. I turned off FTPM, which made it run better. I’ll test this in other games but need to wait before reinstalling because I’ve done a fresh Windows 11 install.