F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Overclocking VRAM causes the system to fail to boot.

Overclocking VRAM causes the system to fail to boot.

Overclocking VRAM causes the system to fail to boot.

M
mjt2789
Senior Member
483
09-09-2016, 04:59 AM
#1
I increased the VRAM on my Sapphire R9 290 OC graphics card with Trixx software. As soon as I pressed "apply," the screen turned black and remained so. After restarting, it went through the BIOS boot screens but froze when trying to access Windows. It didn’t respond at all!

Removing the graphics card and using the Intel Integrated graphics worked perfectly. I also tried deleting Trixx, hoping it was causing the crash during overclocking, but that didn’t help.

Have I damaged my graphics card?
M
mjt2789
09-09-2016, 04:59 AM #1

I increased the VRAM on my Sapphire R9 290 OC graphics card with Trixx software. As soon as I pressed "apply," the screen turned black and remained so. After restarting, it went through the BIOS boot screens but froze when trying to access Windows. It didn’t respond at all!

Removing the graphics card and using the Intel Integrated graphics worked perfectly. I also tried deleting Trixx, hoping it was causing the crash during overclocking, but that didn’t help.

Have I damaged my graphics card?

R
RamboPvPz
Member
50
09-09-2016, 06:41 AM
#2
Before considering a fried video card, it's more likely you should remove the Sapphire R9 290's driver. The most effective method is to boot the system with the R9 290 in safe mode. In the display adapters section, double-click your R9 290, go to the driver tab, and select uninstall driver. After that, restart the computer. It will restart using a standard driver, requiring you to reinstall the newest Crimson drivers from AMD. This approach should resolve the issue. I faced similar challenges when overclocking my Sapphire R9 290 Viper X. Testing with an unstable overclock would cause the computer to freeze or shut down completely, making it difficult to restart properly with the GPU settings.
R
RamboPvPz
09-09-2016, 06:41 AM #2

Before considering a fried video card, it's more likely you should remove the Sapphire R9 290's driver. The most effective method is to boot the system with the R9 290 in safe mode. In the display adapters section, double-click your R9 290, go to the driver tab, and select uninstall driver. After that, restart the computer. It will restart using a standard driver, requiring you to reinstall the newest Crimson drivers from AMD. This approach should resolve the issue. I faced similar challenges when overclocking my Sapphire R9 290 Viper X. Testing with an unstable overclock would cause the computer to freeze or shut down completely, making it difficult to restart properly with the GPU settings.

G
GodRaidYT
Member
76
09-11-2016, 04:12 AM
#3
Before assuming a fried video card, it’s more likely you should remove the Sapphire R9 290's driver. The most effective method is to boot the system with the R9 290 in safe mode. In the display adapters section, double-click your R9 290, go to the driver tab, and choose uninstall driver. After that, restart the computer. It will restart using a standard driver, requiring you to reinstall the newest Crimson drivers from AMD. This approach should resolve the issue. I faced similar challenges when overclocking my Sapphire R9 290 Viper X. Testing with an unstable overclock caused the computer to freeze or shut down, and it couldn’t reboot properly. The only fix was uninstalling the driver and then installing the latest update from AMD.
G
GodRaidYT
09-11-2016, 04:12 AM #3

Before assuming a fried video card, it’s more likely you should remove the Sapphire R9 290's driver. The most effective method is to boot the system with the R9 290 in safe mode. In the display adapters section, double-click your R9 290, go to the driver tab, and choose uninstall driver. After that, restart the computer. It will restart using a standard driver, requiring you to reinstall the newest Crimson drivers from AMD. This approach should resolve the issue. I faced similar challenges when overclocking my Sapphire R9 290 Viper X. Testing with an unstable overclock caused the computer to freeze or shut down, and it couldn’t reboot properly. The only fix was uninstalling the driver and then installing the latest update from AMD.

A
arc9819
Member
219
09-11-2016, 03:48 PM
#4
Thank you very much! The solution functioned perfectly!
A
arc9819
09-11-2016, 03:48 PM #4

Thank you very much! The solution functioned perfectly!

6
64tick
Member
135
09-14-2016, 02:55 PM
#5
No worries, happy to assist you again. When you're working on your overclock, you might run into the same issue once more, but the solution remains unchanged. Success with your Sapphire R9 290 overclocking is guaranteed—they're excellent graphics cards.
6
64tick
09-14-2016, 02:55 PM #5

No worries, happy to assist you again. When you're working on your overclock, you might run into the same issue once more, but the solution remains unchanged. Success with your Sapphire R9 290 overclocking is guaranteed—they're excellent graphics cards.