F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Pop Ins and additional details about electricity explained and resolved.

Pop Ins and additional details about electricity explained and resolved.

Pop Ins and additional details about electricity explained and resolved.

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Mass50
Junior Member
11
05-03-2016, 11:13 PM
#1
I understand many people don’t like me because of the long time I’ve worked fixing these electricity pop-ins, low latency, and jittery issues on both YouTube and games. It’s interesting that there are more discussions about this lately, which might be linked to how advanced the tech has become. Those pop-ins caused by electricity depend on your monitor. If you connect a cable or use something from the new apartment setup to your new hardware, it should arrive in about 2-3 days. My friend experienced the same problem around two months ago. Now I’m in a grounded apartment while he’s in an ungrounded one. It begins with slight jitter and escalates to extreme jitter. By the time it gets worse, it becomes really noticeable. Right now, I can’t see your issue clearly. Problems: Pop-ins close to you, mostly on sides of buildings, bushes, and trees (very close range). The effects are worse in those spots. When lines on buildings appear wavy, it’s especially visible with sharp edges. Shimmering happens when the camera moves, especially over foliage. Desync issues, like in CS2, mean they see you before you do. Shadows in games and bushes follow you wherever you go, almost as if they’re tracking you. Remember, I’m open to questions and advice, but this is mainly explaining what bad electricity does. Moderators, if this isn’t the right thread, move it elsewhere. Hope this helps and I don’t need any negative feedback on something I’m trying to understand completely.
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Mass50
05-03-2016, 11:13 PM #1

I understand many people don’t like me because of the long time I’ve worked fixing these electricity pop-ins, low latency, and jittery issues on both YouTube and games. It’s interesting that there are more discussions about this lately, which might be linked to how advanced the tech has become. Those pop-ins caused by electricity depend on your monitor. If you connect a cable or use something from the new apartment setup to your new hardware, it should arrive in about 2-3 days. My friend experienced the same problem around two months ago. Now I’m in a grounded apartment while he’s in an ungrounded one. It begins with slight jitter and escalates to extreme jitter. By the time it gets worse, it becomes really noticeable. Right now, I can’t see your issue clearly. Problems: Pop-ins close to you, mostly on sides of buildings, bushes, and trees (very close range). The effects are worse in those spots. When lines on buildings appear wavy, it’s especially visible with sharp edges. Shimmering happens when the camera moves, especially over foliage. Desync issues, like in CS2, mean they see you before you do. Shadows in games and bushes follow you wherever you go, almost as if they’re tracking you. Remember, I’m open to questions and advice, but this is mainly explaining what bad electricity does. Moderators, if this isn’t the right thread, move it elsewhere. Hope this helps and I don’t need any negative feedback on something I’m trying to understand completely.

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Blu3forest
Member
85
05-05-2016, 07:24 AM
#2
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Blu3forest
05-05-2016, 07:24 AM #2

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pedro_tkf
Senior Member
643
05-05-2016, 03:10 PM
#3
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pedro_tkf
05-05-2016, 03:10 PM #3

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UmutGungor
Junior Member
19
05-12-2016, 08:09 AM
#4
You're incorrect.
A) Your explanation was unclear.
B) No supporting evidence found.
C) No test results provided.
D) Your statement is inaccurate.
U
UmutGungor
05-12-2016, 08:09 AM #4

You're incorrect.
A) Your explanation was unclear.
B) No supporting evidence found.
C) No test results provided.
D) Your statement is inaccurate.

I
ItzZain
Member
65
05-12-2016, 08:26 AM
#5
I really tried to clarify it, but if you want the specific details, check the exact explanation again. Look through related discussions like low voltage, pop-ins in games, and so on. Notice how many people think it’s an electrical problem. A moderator mentioned outlets or grounding could be the cause on another forum: https://forums. Finding more threads is tough because it’s rare, but it varies by location.
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ItzZain
05-12-2016, 08:26 AM #5

I really tried to clarify it, but if you want the specific details, check the exact explanation again. Look through related discussions like low voltage, pop-ins in games, and so on. Notice how many people think it’s an electrical problem. A moderator mentioned outlets or grounding could be the cause on another forum: https://forums. Finding more threads is tough because it’s rare, but it varies by location.

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BoostedFiST
Junior Member
43
05-13-2016, 04:08 AM
#6
Here are some alternative phrasings of your message:

- Interesting references you found. Those random comments seem odd. It’s funny how a display meant to show input can lead to low LOD. Consumer devices often switch AC to DC, so if the power supply had issues, you’d see shutdowns instead of weird behavior. You’re not understanding what I’m saying here. Low LOD problems usually come from drivers trying to work around VRAM limits. I protect my whole setup with an online UPS, and I can still mimic those low LOD issues—they’re not about power supply.
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BoostedFiST
05-13-2016, 04:08 AM #6

Here are some alternative phrasings of your message:

- Interesting references you found. Those random comments seem odd. It’s funny how a display meant to show input can lead to low LOD. Consumer devices often switch AC to DC, so if the power supply had issues, you’d see shutdowns instead of weird behavior. You’re not understanding what I’m saying here. Low LOD problems usually come from drivers trying to work around VRAM limits. I protect my whole setup with an online UPS, and I can still mimic those low LOD issues—they’re not about power supply.

X
xXGT94Xx
Junior Member
15
05-16-2016, 02:34 AM
#7
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xXGT94Xx
05-16-2016, 02:34 AM #7

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Auztn
Member
163
05-17-2016, 04:46 PM
#8
Noisy power supply output doesn't trigger pop-ins. All components operate on consistent DC voltage from your power source. Graphics issues typically stem from software factors—such as inefficient games, high graphical settings, or faulty drivers. You're likely not displaying at your monitor's full resolution and anti-aliasing is turned off.
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Auztn
05-17-2016, 04:46 PM #8

Noisy power supply output doesn't trigger pop-ins. All components operate on consistent DC voltage from your power source. Graphics issues typically stem from software factors—such as inefficient games, high graphical settings, or faulty drivers. You're likely not displaying at your monitor's full resolution and anti-aliasing is turned off.

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NORFFF
Member
199
05-17-2016, 05:49 PM
#9
You might experience stutters or unexpected problems if the HDMI/DisplayPort connection isn't strong enough to transmit data reliably. This could lead to repeated resets, affecting HDCP encryption and handshake processes. On AMD systems, there’s a control center area that provides debug details about cable quality and other issues. For nVidia cards, similar diagnostic info is usually not available. Most monitors rely on dual isolated power supplies without grounding pins; if an older model includes a built-in ground pin, proper grounding is essential for both the monitor and PC. Texture loading delays often stem from textures being swapped between RAM and VRAM, making it hard for drivers to store them quickly—resulting in sudden pop-ins when the data transfers. In short, these problems aren’t due to poor electrical quality but rather to slow data transfer or improper grounding. ... similar to running a computer with limited RAM on a slow mechanical drive: performance drops noticeably under load. Issues can arise from fragmented storage, low-speed drives, or even subpar power supplies, not just the cable itself.
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NORFFF
05-17-2016, 05:49 PM #9

You might experience stutters or unexpected problems if the HDMI/DisplayPort connection isn't strong enough to transmit data reliably. This could lead to repeated resets, affecting HDCP encryption and handshake processes. On AMD systems, there’s a control center area that provides debug details about cable quality and other issues. For nVidia cards, similar diagnostic info is usually not available. Most monitors rely on dual isolated power supplies without grounding pins; if an older model includes a built-in ground pin, proper grounding is essential for both the monitor and PC. Texture loading delays often stem from textures being swapped between RAM and VRAM, making it hard for drivers to store them quickly—resulting in sudden pop-ins when the data transfers. In short, these problems aren’t due to poor electrical quality but rather to slow data transfer or improper grounding. ... similar to running a computer with limited RAM on a slow mechanical drive: performance drops noticeably under load. Issues can arise from fragmented storage, low-speed drives, or even subpar power supplies, not just the cable itself.

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Wolfycat366
Junior Member
4
05-17-2016, 09:42 PM
#10
Hello! Thanks for your feedback. I’m not comfortable being rushed when trying to resolve a problem. The way Levent replied about me not knowing what I was talking about didn’t help. This has impacted all my hardware, though I’ve moved since then—I’m still investigating the cause. Your message is helpful; it goes from PC to console. The mouse lag was very noticeable on both devices, but I suspect the wall outlet might have been loose. My friend is experiencing the same issue now. Feel free to look at my older posts from 2020 onward if you’d like.
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Wolfycat366
05-17-2016, 09:42 PM #10

Hello! Thanks for your feedback. I’m not comfortable being rushed when trying to resolve a problem. The way Levent replied about me not knowing what I was talking about didn’t help. This has impacted all my hardware, though I’ve moved since then—I’m still investigating the cause. Your message is helpful; it goes from PC to console. The mouse lag was very noticeable on both devices, but I suspect the wall outlet might have been loose. My friend is experiencing the same issue now. Feel free to look at my older posts from 2020 onward if you’d like.

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