F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming The Apex legends began acting strange right after I boosted my GPU's speed.

The Apex legends began acting strange right after I boosted my GPU's speed.

The Apex legends began acting strange right after I boosted my GPU's speed.

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Bosnia25
Junior Member
21
03-11-2017, 08:35 PM
#1
I set up an overclocking profile with afterburner on my RX 580 card and initially it functioned properly for part of the day. Then it began failing suddenly (see image below). My system started behaving erratically—one monitor turned green, and I encountered strange issues like all windows going black with a white outline, plus keyboard keybindings malfunctioning (e.g., fn+F9 to pause, screenshot shortcut keys not working). The GPU temperature was stable at 32°C. It worked before the problem started, but now it crashes after about 10–15 seconds. My memory clock is 2000 MHz, voltage is +6, and power limit is set to +20. I’ve tried normal settings without overclocking, but this issue appeared after adjusting something. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
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Bosnia25
03-11-2017, 08:35 PM #1

I set up an overclocking profile with afterburner on my RX 580 card and initially it functioned properly for part of the day. Then it began failing suddenly (see image below). My system started behaving erratically—one monitor turned green, and I encountered strange issues like all windows going black with a white outline, plus keyboard keybindings malfunctioning (e.g., fn+F9 to pause, screenshot shortcut keys not working). The GPU temperature was stable at 32°C. It worked before the problem started, but now it crashes after about 10–15 seconds. My memory clock is 2000 MHz, voltage is +6, and power limit is set to +20. I’ve tried normal settings without overclocking, but this issue appeared after adjusting something. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

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IvyTheCat
Member
208
03-12-2017, 01:50 AM
#2
A bit of a shaky boost. It doesn’t have to get too hot to fail.
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IvyTheCat
03-12-2017, 01:50 AM #2

A bit of a shaky boost. It doesn’t have to get too hot to fail.

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Raysns
Member
110
03-13-2017, 12:00 PM
#3
Start with basic settings and gradually adjust. Focus on stability over speed. Use reliable tools and monitor temperatures closely.
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Raysns
03-13-2017, 12:00 PM #3

Start with basic settings and gradually adjust. Focus on stability over speed. Use reliable tools and monitor temperatures closely.

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XAcmedX
Member
60
03-14-2017, 03:57 PM
#4
You should only experiment carefully, using trial and error. No shortcut exists. That's why experts suggest boosting one component at a time (like GPU Core first, then GPU Memory). You must determine which part is causing instability. If it only lasts 10–15 seconds, gradually increase the speed. Begin with the GPU Core: add 25 MHz, run stability checks (synthetic tests or games), adjust voltage and power limits as needed, and retry. Once stable, add another 25 MHz. Continue this process. For GPU Memory, follow the same steps with a +25 MHz increment. If it works, proceed; if not, reduce the speed by 10, 15, or 25 MHz and test again. Keep recording your attempts in an Excel sheet, whiteboard, or notebook to track progress and results.
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XAcmedX
03-14-2017, 03:57 PM #4

You should only experiment carefully, using trial and error. No shortcut exists. That's why experts suggest boosting one component at a time (like GPU Core first, then GPU Memory). You must determine which part is causing instability. If it only lasts 10–15 seconds, gradually increase the speed. Begin with the GPU Core: add 25 MHz, run stability checks (synthetic tests or games), adjust voltage and power limits as needed, and retry. Once stable, add another 25 MHz. Continue this process. For GPU Memory, follow the same steps with a +25 MHz increment. If it works, proceed; if not, reduce the speed by 10, 15, or 25 MHz and test again. Keep recording your attempts in an Excel sheet, whiteboard, or notebook to track progress and results.

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Colefusion
Senior Member
382
03-14-2017, 04:24 PM
#5
You confirmed it's an MSI armor rx580 with factory overclocking. The core clock was at 1550, you adjusted it down to 1500 and tweaked power settings, which improved stability. Keybinds are now returning to normal. Thanks!
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Colefusion
03-14-2017, 04:24 PM #5

You confirmed it's an MSI armor rx580 with factory overclocking. The core clock was at 1550, you adjusted it down to 1500 and tweaked power settings, which improved stability. Keybinds are now returning to normal. Thanks!

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SoulRawr
Member
191
03-26-2017, 09:32 AM
#6
Return to normal operations.
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SoulRawr
03-26-2017, 09:32 AM #6

Return to normal operations.

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CuzImBlaZeR
Junior Member
47
03-26-2017, 10:42 AM
#7
It looked like I adjusted it more precisely, but then I realized... no.
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CuzImBlaZeR
03-26-2017, 10:42 AM #7

It looked like I adjusted it more precisely, but then I realized... no.

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ItsMeCamryn
Junior Member
39
03-27-2017, 10:38 PM
#8
Sure, I didn't really go through it. Let me know if you need a summary or anything else!
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ItsMeCamryn
03-27-2017, 10:38 PM #8

Sure, I didn't really go through it. Let me know if you need a summary or anything else!

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ellarem
Member
127
03-31-2017, 11:41 AM
#9
Thanks for the information. I understand it's a factory-optimized card with a base memory speed of 2000MHz. I'll keep this in mind for future decisions, appreciate your guidance!
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ellarem
03-31-2017, 11:41 AM #9

Thanks for the information. I understand it's a factory-optimized card with a base memory speed of 2000MHz. I'll keep this in mind for future decisions, appreciate your guidance!

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BlaseGames
Member
169
03-31-2017, 12:20 PM
#10
ok
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BlaseGames
03-31-2017, 12:20 PM #10

ok

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