F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop The Question OCCT is full of mistakes.

The Question OCCT is full of mistakes.

The Question OCCT is full of mistakes.

T
T3iFul
Member
64
Yesterday, 09:13 PM
#1
So, OCCT shows a lot of errors right when I first try the power test. After 30 minutes, I tried again and there was no error. How is this possible or what problem is it? Here is the full picture: I had issues with Rocket League and other apps (error code 0xc0000005 in Event Viewer). It feels like all games change at every startup. I tried everything online, contacted Nvidia, Microsoft, and Epic to help them. They said they can't fix it anymore. So I decided to do some hardware tests. I used OCCT and found many errors on a power test. I ran it 4 times but only once did I get this error. Every other stability test was good. Even though I installed an older GPU driver with DDU, cleaned Windows up several times, and tried both versions 10 and 11, the problem is still there. All drivers from my motherboard website (ASUS B660M PLUS WIFI D4) are fine. If this happened to me it would be cool because I wouldn't care if I had such problems. It doesn't freeze or stutter; something just feels wrong. Honestly, I hardly get any answers from Nvidia, Microsoft, or Epic anymore. Maybe getting one answer a week is enough for me? Should I RMA the GPU? I bought this PC about 3 years ago and I don't usually mess with Windows after installation. I set power settings to performance, game bar off, 240Hz. In the Nvidia panel, Ultra Low Latency Mode is on but I have tried turning it back and forth and prefer Maximum Performance, High Performance. On BIOS, I disabled Fast Boot and enabled Secure Boot (with custom default key management). I also tried Standard Secure Boot too. There was no overclocking, not even XMP. The problem is that nothing is overclocked. DisplayPort VESA certified. Also, when I plug my computer into a TV outlet, the screen of my TV which is playing something and connected to the PC goes black for a few seconds right now. So I'm trying my computer on a different wall outlet. Thank you if reading all this helps me.
T
T3iFul
Yesterday, 09:13 PM #1

So, OCCT shows a lot of errors right when I first try the power test. After 30 minutes, I tried again and there was no error. How is this possible or what problem is it? Here is the full picture: I had issues with Rocket League and other apps (error code 0xc0000005 in Event Viewer). It feels like all games change at every startup. I tried everything online, contacted Nvidia, Microsoft, and Epic to help them. They said they can't fix it anymore. So I decided to do some hardware tests. I used OCCT and found many errors on a power test. I ran it 4 times but only once did I get this error. Every other stability test was good. Even though I installed an older GPU driver with DDU, cleaned Windows up several times, and tried both versions 10 and 11, the problem is still there. All drivers from my motherboard website (ASUS B660M PLUS WIFI D4) are fine. If this happened to me it would be cool because I wouldn't care if I had such problems. It doesn't freeze or stutter; something just feels wrong. Honestly, I hardly get any answers from Nvidia, Microsoft, or Epic anymore. Maybe getting one answer a week is enough for me? Should I RMA the GPU? I bought this PC about 3 years ago and I don't usually mess with Windows after installation. I set power settings to performance, game bar off, 240Hz. In the Nvidia panel, Ultra Low Latency Mode is on but I have tried turning it back and forth and prefer Maximum Performance, High Performance. On BIOS, I disabled Fast Boot and enabled Secure Boot (with custom default key management). I also tried Standard Secure Boot too. There was no overclocking, not even XMP. The problem is that nothing is overclocked. DisplayPort VESA certified. Also, when I plug my computer into a TV outlet, the screen of my TV which is playing something and connected to the PC goes black for a few seconds right now. So I'm trying my computer on a different wall outlet. Thank you if reading all this helps me.

M
madlol100
Junior Member
13
Today, 04:14 AM
#2
What power supply unit do you have? Is your main board's BIOS program current enough?
M
madlol100
Today, 04:14 AM #2

What power supply unit do you have? Is your main board's BIOS program current enough?

M
Meowables
Senior Member
608
7 hours ago
#3
I have a Power Supply Unit (PSU) that comes from Coolermaster with the model number 750W Coolermaster MPE-7501-ACABW. My BIOS software has already been updated.
M
Meowables
7 hours ago #3

I have a Power Supply Unit (PSU) that comes from Coolermaster with the model number 750W Coolermaster MPE-7501-ACABW. My BIOS software has already been updated.

J
JesseSSinger
Member
169
14 minutes ago
#4
how old is that power supply unit? which plug does your graphics card use? are you sticking with one cable from the PSU, or using two separate cables each with its own plug? do you have any other issues like getting hot when playing games? did you try to overclock the graphics chip? were the test settings and speeds exactly the same for both GPU and power supply?
J
JesseSSinger
14 minutes ago #4

how old is that power supply unit? which plug does your graphics card use? are you sticking with one cable from the PSU, or using two separate cables each with its own plug? do you have any other issues like getting hot when playing games? did you try to overclock the graphics chip? were the test settings and speeds exactly the same for both GPU and power supply?