F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Performance seems unusual. (Ryzen 1200 & GTX 1050 Ti)

Performance seems unusual. (Ryzen 1200 & GTX 1050 Ti)

Performance seems unusual. (Ryzen 1200 & GTX 1050 Ti)

I
ImNotYourPvp
Member
52
11-29-2016, 10:35 AM
#1
I recently installed a Ryzen 1200 OC to 3.8ghz with a GTX 1050 Ti, 12GB RAM (2400MHz) on a Gigabyte A550 gaming motherboard. When I played Battlefield 1 at low settings, frame drops were frequent, as low as 30 FPS. However, when I switched to high and ultra settings, the frames remained stable above 50 FPS longer than with low settings. There were still moments when running at high to ultra caused dips in the 40s to 50s during intense scenes. I adjusted the NVIDIA drivers but the issue persisted, making me wonder what was causing the instability. I noticed others on YouTube with similar configurations without the extra RAM performed better.
I
ImNotYourPvp
11-29-2016, 10:35 AM #1

I recently installed a Ryzen 1200 OC to 3.8ghz with a GTX 1050 Ti, 12GB RAM (2400MHz) on a Gigabyte A550 gaming motherboard. When I played Battlefield 1 at low settings, frame drops were frequent, as low as 30 FPS. However, when I switched to high and ultra settings, the frames remained stable above 50 FPS longer than with low settings. There were still moments when running at high to ultra caused dips in the 40s to 50s during intense scenes. I adjusted the NVIDIA drivers but the issue persisted, making me wonder what was causing the instability. I noticed others on YouTube with similar configurations without the extra RAM performed better.

X
170
11-29-2016, 12:11 PM
#2
Have you checked faster stock speeds to determine if the dips persist? It might indicate an OC stability problem.
X
xxSuperSweetxx
11-29-2016, 12:11 PM #2

Have you checked faster stock speeds to determine if the dips persist? It might indicate an OC stability problem.

D
Dreemurrz
Member
220
12-07-2016, 04:11 AM
#3
I haven't attempted it, but wouldn't lowering the clock speed result in poor performance?
D
Dreemurrz
12-07-2016, 04:11 AM #3

I haven't attempted it, but wouldn't lowering the clock speed result in poor performance?

S
Stratin_OG
Member
232
12-07-2016, 10:36 AM
#4
This affects your overall performance, so check if the big frame drops remain visible
S
Stratin_OG
12-07-2016, 10:36 AM #4

This affects your overall performance, so check if the big frame drops remain visible

A
Athenita
Member
164
12-08-2016, 04:30 PM
#5
I understand, I'll attempt to do that when I get back.
A
Athenita
12-08-2016, 04:30 PM #5

I understand, I'll attempt to do that when I get back.

W
wahleno
Member
243
12-08-2016, 07:55 PM
#6
a small adjustment, I can change the CPU to 3.7 without raising voltage and keep temperatures around 60°C to 70°C. But at 3.8 I increase voltage to 1.3V in Ryzen Master and temperatures rise to 60°C to 80°C.
W
wahleno
12-08-2016, 07:55 PM #6

a small adjustment, I can change the CPU to 3.7 without raising voltage and keep temperatures around 60°C to 70°C. But at 3.8 I increase voltage to 1.3V in Ryzen Master and temperatures rise to 60°C to 80°C.

V
VebbiHD
Member
209
12-08-2016, 09:35 PM
#7
Consider running a stress test such as AIDA64 for several hours to check for issues. With your Ryzen 5 1600, you'll need to adjust the VCore to 1.3125 for a stable 3.8 overclock.
V
VebbiHD
12-08-2016, 09:35 PM #7

Consider running a stress test such as AIDA64 for several hours to check for issues. With your Ryzen 5 1600, you'll need to adjust the VCore to 1.3125 for a stable 3.8 overclock.