F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming PC Gaming = PC force-shutdown...

PC Gaming = PC force-shutdown...

PC Gaming = PC force-shutdown...

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CaptanJim
Member
160
12-30-2017, 04:30 AM
#1
Here’s a rewritten version of your text, aiming for clarity and detail:

“I'm experiencing intermittent shutdowns on my gaming PC, which I primarily use for playing games. My system specs are as follows: an Intel Core i7 8086k processor running at 4GHz, an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti graphics card, 32GB of Kingston DDR4 RAM (4000MHz), a SAMSUNG SSD 970 Pro NVMe M.2 1TB drive, a motherboard by MSI Z370 A Pro E7B48IMS.2B0, a Seasonic FOCUS GX-850 80PLUS Gold power supply, a BeQuiet Pure Base 600 Window Orange case, and a BeQuiet Dark Rock Pro 4 cooler. My monitor is an ASUS PG279Q 2560x1440 165Hz display.

I can play most games without issue, but when I play *The Witcher 3*, the system shuts down unexpectedly after approximately 30 minutes to an hour of gameplay. The shutdowns are forceful – it’s a complete power-off, not just a freeze.

I'm trying to determine the cause of these random shutdowns. Could you advise on how best to diagnose this issue?”
C
CaptanJim
12-30-2017, 04:30 AM #1

Here’s a rewritten version of your text, aiming for clarity and detail:

“I'm experiencing intermittent shutdowns on my gaming PC, which I primarily use for playing games. My system specs are as follows: an Intel Core i7 8086k processor running at 4GHz, an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti graphics card, 32GB of Kingston DDR4 RAM (4000MHz), a SAMSUNG SSD 970 Pro NVMe M.2 1TB drive, a motherboard by MSI Z370 A Pro E7B48IMS.2B0, a Seasonic FOCUS GX-850 80PLUS Gold power supply, a BeQuiet Pure Base 600 Window Orange case, and a BeQuiet Dark Rock Pro 4 cooler. My monitor is an ASUS PG279Q 2560x1440 165Hz display.

I can play most games without issue, but when I play *The Witcher 3*, the system shuts down unexpectedly after approximately 30 minutes to an hour of gameplay. The shutdowns are forceful – it’s a complete power-off, not just a freeze.

I'm trying to determine the cause of these random shutdowns. Could you advise on how best to diagnose this issue?”

H
helenma0301
Senior Member
250
12-31-2017, 10:35 PM
#2
I have no intent other than helping...
The software can only display temperatures if there is a hardware sensor present. There are many components that are simply not monitored or not available for monitoring by end-user.
In my thread I had removed overclocking but that did not help.
With regards to the problem you have, try cancelling out the motherboard VRM issue by doing what I did with the intel tuning utility and running it like that for a few days or until the first issue.
If...
H
helenma0301
12-31-2017, 10:35 PM #2

I have no intent other than helping...
The software can only display temperatures if there is a hardware sensor present. There are many components that are simply not monitored or not available for monitoring by end-user.
In my thread I had removed overclocking but that did not help.
With regards to the problem you have, try cancelling out the motherboard VRM issue by doing what I did with the intel tuning utility and running it like that for a few days or until the first issue.
If...

T
TdmFan92
Senior Member
602
01-02-2018, 12:29 PM
#3
Something gets too hot would be me guess... PSU/CPU VRM/GPU VRM shuts it down by thermal trigger.
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TdmFan92
01-02-2018, 12:29 PM #3

Something gets too hot would be me guess... PSU/CPU VRM/GPU VRM shuts it down by thermal trigger.

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EnderShotMc
Junior Member
27
01-02-2018, 01:45 PM
#4
How can i verify that it is heat causing the shutdown?
My temps look normal...
GPU around 70, CPU 50 - 60, only the SSD is "a bit hot" 60-70 C.
The ssd is from samsung so i downloaded samsung tool named "magician"
With this tool i can clearly see the SSD should not be over 60 Celsius temperature.
Mine reachs 70 in heavy-graphic games.
Already bought an additional "cooling addon" for the SSD but helps only like 3-5 C.
Can it be the SSD or what else? I recently bought the case and the PSU because my old PSU wasnt strong enough anymore, i had many "shutdowns"
AGAIN, i dont have those shutdown problems anymore, it happens ONLY while playing witcher3.
In the last 3 days mc PC "shutdown" 7 times, while playing witcher 3.
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EnderShotMc
01-02-2018, 01:45 PM #4

How can i verify that it is heat causing the shutdown?
My temps look normal...
GPU around 70, CPU 50 - 60, only the SSD is "a bit hot" 60-70 C.
The ssd is from samsung so i downloaded samsung tool named "magician"
With this tool i can clearly see the SSD should not be over 60 Celsius temperature.
Mine reachs 70 in heavy-graphic games.
Already bought an additional "cooling addon" for the SSD but helps only like 3-5 C.
Can it be the SSD or what else? I recently bought the case and the PSU because my old PSU wasnt strong enough anymore, i had many "shutdowns"
AGAIN, i dont have those shutdown problems anymore, it happens ONLY while playing witcher3.
In the last 3 days mc PC "shutdown" 7 times, while playing witcher 3.

A
AlaskaMeh
Member
60
01-07-2018, 07:28 PM
#5
https://ibb.co/rcbCKqB
https://ibb.co/Q6Hprgy
When you open the link right klick the picture and choose show graphics, so you can zoom in and identify the errors.
You can see mainly i have "cernel power critical error"
My PSU is brand new 850 W gold certified. unless its damaged there is no way it cause the shutdowns.
A
AlaskaMeh
01-07-2018, 07:28 PM #5

https://ibb.co/rcbCKqB
https://ibb.co/Q6Hprgy
When you open the link right klick the picture and choose show graphics, so you can zoom in and identify the errors.
You can see mainly i have "cernel power critical error"
My PSU is brand new 850 W gold certified. unless its damaged there is no way it cause the shutdowns.

O
OmqDace
Posting Freak
798
01-09-2018, 12:18 AM
#6
This question is not possible to answer due to the nature of how computers operate and what they need to function.
O
OmqDace
01-09-2018, 12:18 AM #6

This question is not possible to answer due to the nature of how computers operate and what they need to function.

M
minefresse123
Junior Member
4
01-13-2018, 02:48 PM
#7
How do i findout temps of my PSU ?
If got, CPUID HWmonitor CPUID CPUZ TechPowerUp GPU Z, or the basic windows stuff, resourcemonitor, performance monitoring, any of those can help?
The PSU has no fan, atleast none that is visible so i guess there is none.
But its 850 W seasonic gold certified, if that overheats why the * is it called gold ceritifed... a fan wouldnt be wrong.
M
minefresse123
01-13-2018, 02:48 PM #7

How do i findout temps of my PSU ?
If got, CPUID HWmonitor CPUID CPUZ TechPowerUp GPU Z, or the basic windows stuff, resourcemonitor, performance monitoring, any of those can help?
The PSU has no fan, atleast none that is visible so i guess there is none.
But its 850 W seasonic gold certified, if that overheats why the * is it called gold ceritifed... a fan wouldnt be wrong.

M
MrTurtleLover
Member
243
01-13-2018, 09:12 PM
#8
This text describes a troubleshooting scenario involving a computer's performance issues, focusing on potential weaknesses in its hardware components. It details how a seemingly complex technical problem was traced back to a specific component – a weak motherboard VRM (Voltage Regulator Module) – and provides a link to a related discussion thread for further information. The key takeaway is the importance of recognizing subtle inefficiencies within computer systems.
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MrTurtleLover
01-13-2018, 09:12 PM #8

This text describes a troubleshooting scenario involving a computer's performance issues, focusing on potential weaknesses in its hardware components. It details how a seemingly complex technical problem was traced back to a specific component – a weak motherboard VRM (Voltage Regulator Module) – and provides a link to a related discussion thread for further information. The key takeaway is the importance of recognizing subtle inefficiencies within computer systems.

D
DollynhoBr123
Member
73
01-13-2018, 09:45 PM
#9
Im trying to solve problem not thinking of sarcasm.
I have many programs surely one of them can display the PSU temps, or is it truely not possible to monitor PSU ?
In your thread i read the word overclocking, i dont do that so its not for me,
D
DollynhoBr123
01-13-2018, 09:45 PM #9

Im trying to solve problem not thinking of sarcasm.
I have many programs surely one of them can display the PSU temps, or is it truely not possible to monitor PSU ?
In your thread i read the word overclocking, i dont do that so its not for me,

M
Mrgamer2005
Junior Member
9
01-22-2018, 06:33 PM
#10
The software can only display temperatures if there is a hardware sensor present. There are many components that are simply not monitored or not available for monitoring by end-user.

In my thread I had removed overclocking but that did not help.

With regards to the problem you have, try cancelling out the motherboard VRM issue by doing what I did with the intel tuning utility and running it like that for a few days or until the first issue.

If that does not help, try cancelling out GPU VRM by lowering graphics power limit to 75% or lower (and the frequencies so it stays stable) and running it like that for a few days or until the first issue.
M
Mrgamer2005
01-22-2018, 06:33 PM #10

The software can only display temperatures if there is a hardware sensor present. There are many components that are simply not monitored or not available for monitoring by end-user.

In my thread I had removed overclocking but that did not help.

With regards to the problem you have, try cancelling out the motherboard VRM issue by doing what I did with the intel tuning utility and running it like that for a few days or until the first issue.

If that does not help, try cancelling out GPU VRM by lowering graphics power limit to 75% or lower (and the frequencies so it stays stable) and running it like that for a few days or until the first issue.