F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Pc slows down after 5 minutes

Pc slows down after 5 minutes

Pc slows down after 5 minutes

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BlastDu06
Member
67
05-30-2016, 12:02 PM
#1
Intel Pentium G620 @2.60GHz
Intel HD 2000 Graphics
Motherboard MSI 945GCM7 series
Corsair 4GB DDR3 ram
Seagate 256GB hard disk
Hp DVD writer
Local Power Suppl (Zebronics) 450W
My power supply (450W) stopped working, so I switched to a new 450W unit. Now my PC slows down after just five minutes. I have no experience with overclocking, but after checking existing discussions, I suspect the issue might be related to the CPU core voltage. I used HWiNFO and obtained these results:
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BlastDu06
05-30-2016, 12:02 PM #1

Intel Pentium G620 @2.60GHz
Intel HD 2000 Graphics
Motherboard MSI 945GCM7 series
Corsair 4GB DDR3 ram
Seagate 256GB hard disk
Hp DVD writer
Local Power Suppl (Zebronics) 450W
My power supply (450W) stopped working, so I switched to a new 450W unit. Now my PC slows down after just five minutes. I have no experience with overclocking, but after checking existing discussions, I suspect the issue might be related to the CPU core voltage. I used HWiNFO and obtained these results:

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Dire_Storm
Member
65
05-30-2016, 01:12 PM
#2
Your memory consumption is quite high, causing the system to rely on the paging file (on the hard drive), which significantly slows performance. According to MSI, the maximum memory allowed for this board is 4GB. Review the task manager to identify memory-heavy processes and disable any unnecessary ones.
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Dire_Storm
05-30-2016, 01:12 PM #2

Your memory consumption is quite high, causing the system to rely on the paging file (on the hard drive), which significantly slows performance. According to MSI, the maximum memory allowed for this board is 4GB. Review the task manager to identify memory-heavy processes and disable any unnecessary ones.

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Dragonboy999
Junior Member
21
05-30-2016, 03:39 PM
#3
Your memory consumption is quite high, causing the system to rely on the paging file (on the hard drive), which significantly slows performance. According to MSI, the maximum memory allowed for this board is 4GB. Review the task manager to identify memory-heavy processes and disable any unnecessary ones.
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Dragonboy999
05-30-2016, 03:39 PM #3

Your memory consumption is quite high, causing the system to rely on the paging file (on the hard drive), which significantly slows performance. According to MSI, the maximum memory allowed for this board is 4GB. Review the task manager to identify memory-heavy processes and disable any unnecessary ones.

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Nero12321
Posting Freak
858
05-30-2016, 03:47 PM
#4
Yes, running out of RAM is one of the most severe methods to ruin performance.
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Nero12321
05-30-2016, 03:47 PM #4

Yes, running out of RAM is one of the most severe methods to ruin performance.

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BottyBotsworth
Junior Member
16
05-31-2016, 09:07 AM
#5
I recommend increasing the amount of RAM. Many users have 16GB and 4GB are no longer sufficient. For a temporary solution, try using advanced system care to free up memory from unused services.
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BottyBotsworth
05-31-2016, 09:07 AM #5

I recommend increasing the amount of RAM. Many users have 16GB and 4GB are no longer sufficient. For a temporary solution, try using advanced system care to free up memory from unused services.

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Donut__Gamer
Junior Member
49
05-31-2016, 09:05 PM
#6
There are no issues with the core voltage of the CPU. I attempted to open the task manager, but it doesn't open when the computer slows down.
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Donut__Gamer
05-31-2016, 09:05 PM #6

There are no issues with the core voltage of the CPU. I attempted to open the task manager, but it doesn't open when the computer slows down.

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Nelson_AYK
Junior Member
39
05-31-2016, 09:56 PM
#7
I was using the same computer for the past two years without any issues, but now after changing the PSU it started to happen again. Oops! I accidentally chose you as the best answer. Sorry for that, this is my first post and I wasn't very familiar with posting.
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Nelson_AYK
05-31-2016, 09:56 PM #7

I was using the same computer for the past two years without any issues, but now after changing the PSU it started to happen again. Oops! I accidentally chose you as the best answer. Sorry for that, this is my first post and I wasn't very familiar with posting.

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__Lucius__
Junior Member
11
06-01-2016, 05:37 AM
#8
I recommend increasing the amount of RAM. Many users have 16GB or 4GB, which are no longer sufficient. . . .
The issue is that most models cannot upgrade beyond 4GB, as that is the maximum supported by MSI. OP, what version are you using?
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__Lucius__
06-01-2016, 05:37 AM #8

I recommend increasing the amount of RAM. Many users have 16GB or 4GB, which are no longer sufficient. . . .
The issue is that most models cannot upgrade beyond 4GB, as that is the maximum supported by MSI. OP, what version are you using?

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Eduardo_GameOn
Posting Freak
921
06-01-2016, 06:00 AM
#9
RealBeast suggests increasing the RAM capacity. Many users have 16GB or 4GB, but these amounts are no longer sufficient. Most systems cannot be upgraded past 4GB as per MSI guidelines. OP, could you confirm the exact model you're using?
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Eduardo_GameOn
06-01-2016, 06:00 AM #9

RealBeast suggests increasing the RAM capacity. Many users have 16GB or 4GB, but these amounts are no longer sufficient. Most systems cannot be upgraded past 4GB as per MSI guidelines. OP, could you confirm the exact model you're using?