Reporting a slight frame drop or micro stutter lasting a brief moment each second.
Reporting a slight frame drop or micro stutter lasting a brief moment each second.
Hey.
So this is an issue i've had with my previous PCs for absolutely unknows reasons. But it started to do it on my new one too.
In game i have 1% low fps really low like sometimes 0. The freezes/ sutter doesnt happend everytime, it is super random. I restart the computer and poof, it's gone. I start chrome(or any other app) and its comes back.
I'm 100% sure that the PC is not throtling. Expo is enabled, bios and all drivers up to date. And i realy don't know what to do, it's really impossible to play aiming games like this, even rocket league, I cannot play the game.
Here a userbench :
https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/71...#PROCESSOR
I'm running win11, 9070xt, 9800x3d. No game should do this.
Did you reset the CMOS after the bios update? If not, you should. Otherwise, it might retain old microcode, leading to small problems like stuttering.
I've attempted to maintain just one monitor but no updates occurred. Using 0 apps works, yet sometimes everything appears correctly even when it's fully set up.
I didn't manage to complete it sadly. I disabled the two pins as instructed in the manual, but after restarting I had to open the BIOS to confirm I followed the correct steps. However, I started a game and everything worked fine until I opened Chrome—it would reappear and then remain active. I closed Chrome from the task manager, but it still freezes and stays until I power off the computer. Sometimes it disappears for no apparent reason.
Certainly. Here is the rewritten version:
If you are not using Chrome, does that mean there is no stuttering?
Have you considered disabling Chrome's GPU scheduling?
Overview of AI
To disable GPU acceleration in Chrome, launch the browser and tap the three dots in the upper-right corner. Choose Settings, then select System from the menu on the left. On the System page, switch off the option that says "Use hardware acceleration when available." Then press the Restart button to refresh Chrome and implement the change.
How to do it step by step:
Launch Google Chrome
On your computer.
Press the three vertical dots (Customize and control Google Chrome menu) in the top-right corner of the browser window.
Select Settings from the dropdown.
In the left sidebar, find and click the System option.
Locate the switch for "Use hardware acceleration when available" and turn it off. It should change to gray or move to the left.
Press the Restart button that appears to restart Chrome and apply the adjustment.
When to turn off GPU acceleration:
Resolving performance problems:
Disabling hardware acceleration can help if you encounter slowdowns or freezes.
Improving video and animation quality:
Turning this off may lead to smoother playback.
Saving battery life:
Hardware acceleration uses more power, so disabling it can prolong battery usage.
Also, have you considered using the least number of devices connected via USB, just a keyboard and mouse? Do you rely on custom mouse/keymap software for RGB or any tools that adjust system settings, such as core voltage or clock speeds? Things like MSI Afterburner, Corsair iCUe, ASUS Armoury Crate, or MSI Dragon Center? Turn off any of those programs and see if it improves performance.
It's not just the chrome that "enables" the stutering. I can launch another app on the computer and it will also do it. I disabled GPU acceleration (I already suspected it was off, since videos on the main screen showed very low FPS when GPU accel was on). But anyway, I'll let you know after some time if this affected anything.