Problema con el controlador RTX 5060 Ti en la noche.
Problema con el controlador RTX 5060 Ti en la noche.
Hi everyone, I own a desktop PC that began as an Asus GL10DH prebuilt unit; it originally came with modest components. Over time, I upgraded it considerably, leaving only the processor and motherboard original. Recently, I saved up to upgrade from a GTX 1650 to an RTX 5060 Ti. My current setup includes: Ryzen 5 3400G (this might cause performance issues if paired with the 5060, though I plan to replace it soon), Asus GL10DH motherboard (with original PC), 32GB DDR4 RAM from Crucial (bought in Summer 2024), a 500 GB M.2 SSD (Intel branded), and a 2 TB hard drive for media storage (bought in '15). I recently upgraded to an 8GB RTX 5060 Ti, which I bought new and kept under $400 USD.
The main issue is with the graphics drivers. After installing them via the NVidia app, the system worked fine until a restart caused it to freeze completely during sign-in. I tried wiping the drivers using DDU on a flash drive, booted in safe mode, and performed a clean install. That got me back online, but when I reinstalled the NVIDIA app, it froze halfway through and required another hard reset. Now, even after multiple attempts, I can’t launch any games because the drivers are missing, and my display isn’t running at 144 Hz with no adjustment option.
I’ve heard some users face problems with the RTX 5060 Ti drivers, so I’m wondering if there’s a solution. I’m not sure if it’s just that the 3400G is outdated for this card, but I want to avoid upgrading too soon. I plan to update my AMD drivers first and would appreciate any advice or alternatives you might have. Thanks in advance!
Configure the PCI-E generation in the BIOS to Gen 3 if possible. It's also recommended to use a driver version that is not the newest one.
It turned out this card isn't working at all. I installed it on a brand-new PC with fresh hardware (B550 chipset motherboard) and the old 1650 chip — it wouldn’t even start. Should I put the 1650 back in? Absolutely. Now it makes sense because my 3400G has integrated graphics. I’m not thrilled about using NVIDIA right now; I’m moving to AMD instead.
Just because one card is out of date doesn't mean you have to reject the whole company. Situations can arise, and some cards might be lost or damaged during shipping. Consider switching to AMD if it brings you more confidence, though the same issue could affect an AMD card as well.
I concur, the initial focus should be on the manufacturer who produced the card, as the original poster hasn't addressed it. Is this a typical problem with that specific brand? nVidia provides GPUs and reference designs for other companies but only manufactures a few models.