overclocked GPU cause crash
overclocked GPU cause crash
your overclocked gpu leads to crashes in games due to instability, possibly from driver conflicts or hardware stress. the message about the display driver stopping and then recovering suggests a temporary glitch. since it's factory overclocked, adjusting settings carefully may help stabilize performance.
If you intended to overclock the card, and the video driver ceased responding causing Leaf89 to crash, then the issue arises because the overclocked configurations remain active and load immediately after Windows boots. This happens since the settings persist and are still being processed. You must remove the Nvidia video drivers from your system. To do this, enter safe mode in Windows so the driver doesn't load. Safe mode uses only the essential driver set Windows provides, which prevents the card from crashing. Then uninstall the Nvidia drivers through the Programs and Features section in Windows Safe Mode. After completing these steps, restart the system.
Have you clean installed the newest drivers?
Here's a helpful link.
Do you have all the most recent Windows updates?
Please list all of your system components and the operating system. Make sure to include power supply make and model.
Have you made any changes to hardware recently? (other than the video card?)
weberdarren97 :
Have you clean installed the newest drivers?
Here's a helpful link.
Do you have all the most recent Windows updates?
Please list all of your system components and the operating system. Make sure to include power supply make and model.
Have you made any changes to hardware recently? (other than the video card?)
my specs are below my post. bottom to the right. ive did all that still get the error
If you intended to increase the card's performance and the video driver ceased functioning and caused crashes in Leaf89, then the issue persists whenever Windows initializes. This happens because the overclocked configurations remain active and load immediately after the operating system starts. You must delete the Nvidia video drivers from your system. To do this, enter safe mode in Windows so the driver doesn't load. Safe mode uses only the essential driver set Windows provides, which prevents the card from crashing. Then remove the Nvidia drivers through the Programs and Features menu in safe mode. After completing these steps, restart the system. Finally, reinstall the Nvidia video drivers to reset any overclocked settings applied to your GTX 960 card regarding speed and memory performance. Once finished, your system should no longer crash after Windows loads or when playing games like Leaf89. Any overclocking adjustments will be preserved until the next system restart.