F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Please confirm if your GPU is malfunctioning.

Please confirm if your GPU is malfunctioning.

Please confirm if your GPU is malfunctioning.

I
Imagodie
Junior Member
16
03-20-2016, 11:48 AM
#1
I believe my GPU (Gigabyte G1 GTX1060) is faulty.
While playing WoW I saw the "display driver stopped responding and has recovered" message, which made it impossible to watch YouTube videos. I reinstalled drivers but it didn’t help. Here is my SS from gpuz when trying to run YouTube: http://imgur.com/WOBF9s8
Should I consider sending it for warranty?
I
Imagodie
03-20-2016, 11:48 AM #1

I believe my GPU (Gigabyte G1 GTX1060) is faulty.
While playing WoW I saw the "display driver stopped responding and has recovered" message, which made it impossible to watch YouTube videos. I reinstalled drivers but it didn’t help. Here is my SS from gpuz when trying to run YouTube: http://imgur.com/WOBF9s8
Should I consider sending it for warranty?

T
Thyme0917
Junior Member
10
03-20-2016, 12:19 PM
#2
Did you attempt Safe mode or System Restore?
T
Thyme0917
03-20-2016, 12:19 PM #2

Did you attempt Safe mode or System Restore?

K
krille96an
Junior Member
40
04-07-2016, 08:02 PM
#3
It seems everything works fine in safe mode, possibly with integrated graphics. Turning off the GTX1060 didn't resolve the issue. Reinstalling drivers via DDU didn't help either. After reinstalling Windows, the card in the second PC doesn't show the expected error message, but performance is poor and games don't launch properly.
K
krille96an
04-07-2016, 08:02 PM #3

It seems everything works fine in safe mode, possibly with integrated graphics. Turning off the GTX1060 didn't resolve the issue. Reinstalling drivers via DDU didn't help either. After reinstalling Windows, the card in the second PC doesn't show the expected error message, but performance is poor and games don't launch properly.

K
KeithFM
Junior Member
2
04-09-2016, 03:40 AM
#4
Windows requires integrated graphics to be connected via the monitor plugged into the motherboard port, meaning you must also use the GPU. Ensure proper connection to the GPU. It seems many users have tried troubleshooting on forums, only to discover they were connected to the motherboard instead of the GPU. Consider using an older driver version from the GPU manufacturer's website and test in previous versions.
K
KeithFM
04-09-2016, 03:40 AM #4

Windows requires integrated graphics to be connected via the monitor plugged into the motherboard port, meaning you must also use the GPU. Ensure proper connection to the GPU. It seems many users have tried troubleshooting on forums, only to discover they were connected to the motherboard instead of the GPU. Consider using an older driver version from the GPU manufacturer's website and test in previous versions.

X
XxGra4yxX
Junior Member
46
04-09-2016, 03:55 AM
#5
I'm properly connected and previous drivers didn't assist, so I'll submit it for warranty on Monday.
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XxGra4yxX
04-09-2016, 03:55 AM #5

I'm properly connected and previous drivers didn't assist, so I'll submit it for warranty on Monday.

W
walee123
Senior Member
737
04-16-2016, 05:47 PM
#6
What is the model and make of your power supply? A low quality or inadequate PSU might be the issue too.
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walee123
04-16-2016, 05:47 PM #6

What is the model and make of your power supply? A low quality or inadequate PSU might be the issue too.

B
Blu3forest
Member
85
04-18-2016, 06:25 PM
#7
It's XFX TS 550W (P1-550S-XXB9) but if it didn't work, it still functioned for half a year.
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Blu3forest
04-18-2016, 06:25 PM #7

It's XFX TS 550W (P1-550S-XXB9) but if it didn't work, it still functioned for half a year.

B
BrendaPanda
Junior Member
29
04-30-2016, 06:53 AM
#8
That is actually a pretty decent PSU, so unless it is somehow faulty, it has plenty of power, for your system.
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BrendaPanda
04-30-2016, 06:53 AM #8

That is actually a pretty decent PSU, so unless it is somehow faulty, it has plenty of power, for your system.

H
Hetchok
Member
172
05-01-2016, 02:27 AM
#9
It seems everything is functioning in safe mode, possibly with integrated graphics working. Turning off the GTX1060 didn’t resolve the issue either. Reinstalling drivers with DDU didn’t help. Testing the card on a second PC shows low FPS or games won’t start. It likely points to a software problem. I recommend these steps:
1. Check Event Viewer for details
2. Use Display Driver Uninstaller before installing new drivers: http://www.majorgeeks.com/files/details/...aller.html
3. Disable as many startup apps as possible
4. Remove third-party antivirus/malware and revert to Windows Defender temporarily while troubleshooting
H
Hetchok
05-01-2016, 02:27 AM #9

It seems everything is functioning in safe mode, possibly with integrated graphics working. Turning off the GTX1060 didn’t resolve the issue either. Reinstalling drivers with DDU didn’t help. Testing the card on a second PC shows low FPS or games won’t start. It likely points to a software problem. I recommend these steps:
1. Check Event Viewer for details
2. Use Display Driver Uninstaller before installing new drivers: http://www.majorgeeks.com/files/details/...aller.html
3. Disable as many startup apps as possible
4. Remove third-party antivirus/malware and revert to Windows Defender temporarily while troubleshooting

J
JediH3ro
Junior Member
43
05-01-2016, 11:26 PM
#10
I mentioned that everything worked in safe mode, but that was incorrect—I had a low frame rate issue (1-5) that persisted even after installing clean windows, using two different drivers (including DDU), and on the second PC. How could this be a software problem?
J
JediH3ro
05-01-2016, 11:26 PM #10

I mentioned that everything worked in safe mode, but that was incorrect—I had a low frame rate issue (1-5) that persisted even after installing clean windows, using two different drivers (including DDU), and on the second PC. How could this be a software problem?