F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Troubleshooting driving issues for a month is really frustrating.

Troubleshooting driving issues for a month is really frustrating.

Troubleshooting driving issues for a month is really frustrating.

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mutantplant55
Junior Member
5
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM
#1
Build: I7 14700KF RTX 5070 with 12GB Galax 2x16GB RAM DDR5, HyperX Fury 6000MHz, Gigabyte Aorus Elite B760M SSD NVMe 1TB, WC Gamdias Chione V4 240mm, PS 750W 80 Gold Plus TUF Gaming Asus LG Ultragear QHD 240Hz, 27” Mouse. Logitech G502X Lightspeed Wireless. Intro: After several years, I finally assembled a gaming rig, but it turned into a challenge. I experience frequent microstutters in online games (mainly CS2, PUBG, DayZ, Warzone, Rematch), though single-player runs are smooth. Online performance shows 0–1% stuttering with significant frame drops—often dropping to 80fps or less on CS2 and 40fps on DayZ. It’s especially bothersome since I’ve invested around $5,000, and the issues are clear. Throughout troubleshooting, only a few components changed; the core problem persisted before these updates. I swapped parts like the GPU from I5 14400F to I7 14700KF RTX 4060, upgraded RAM to DDR5, moved to 12GB Galax 2x16GB, and updated BIOS settings extensively. I tested various BIOS configurations, driver versions (including Nvidia), Windows updates, and even removed the PCIe WiFi/BT card. Clearing DiskInfo helped slightly—SSD performed better after removing the old card. BIOS tweaks included enabling XMP, adjusting CPU settings, and managing E-Cores. I also disabled USB controllers, changed monitor resolution, and adjusted mouse pooling rates. LatencyMon often flagged kernel issues or slow processes. When updating BIOS, my mouse would stutter or freeze. The only relief came from disabling the PCIe network card. After trying everything—from drivers to hardware swaps—I’m still seeking a permanent fix. Please let me know if you need more details. Thank you!
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mutantplant55
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM #1

Build: I7 14700KF RTX 5070 with 12GB Galax 2x16GB RAM DDR5, HyperX Fury 6000MHz, Gigabyte Aorus Elite B760M SSD NVMe 1TB, WC Gamdias Chione V4 240mm, PS 750W 80 Gold Plus TUF Gaming Asus LG Ultragear QHD 240Hz, 27” Mouse. Logitech G502X Lightspeed Wireless. Intro: After several years, I finally assembled a gaming rig, but it turned into a challenge. I experience frequent microstutters in online games (mainly CS2, PUBG, DayZ, Warzone, Rematch), though single-player runs are smooth. Online performance shows 0–1% stuttering with significant frame drops—often dropping to 80fps or less on CS2 and 40fps on DayZ. It’s especially bothersome since I’ve invested around $5,000, and the issues are clear. Throughout troubleshooting, only a few components changed; the core problem persisted before these updates. I swapped parts like the GPU from I5 14400F to I7 14700KF RTX 4060, upgraded RAM to DDR5, moved to 12GB Galax 2x16GB, and updated BIOS settings extensively. I tested various BIOS configurations, driver versions (including Nvidia), Windows updates, and even removed the PCIe WiFi/BT card. Clearing DiskInfo helped slightly—SSD performed better after removing the old card. BIOS tweaks included enabling XMP, adjusting CPU settings, and managing E-Cores. I also disabled USB controllers, changed monitor resolution, and adjusted mouse pooling rates. LatencyMon often flagged kernel issues or slow processes. When updating BIOS, my mouse would stutter or freeze. The only relief came from disabling the PCIe network card. After trying everything—from drivers to hardware swaps—I’m still seeking a permanent fix. Please let me know if you need more details. Thank you!

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oOEmmaOo
Posting Freak
818
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM
#2
What previous motherboard were you using? The Gigabyte B760M Aorus Elite you have now is a DDR5 memory board—this model doesn’t support DD4 RAM. What brand and model of your NVMe SSD are you using? Are you operating on Windows 11? If yes, I’m assuming version 24H2. Your CPU temperatures remain within acceptable ranges during gaming sessions.
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oOEmmaOo
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM #2

What previous motherboard were you using? The Gigabyte B760M Aorus Elite you have now is a DDR5 memory board—this model doesn’t support DD4 RAM. What brand and model of your NVMe SSD are you using? Are you operating on Windows 11? If yes, I’m assuming version 24H2. Your CPU temperatures remain within acceptable ranges during gaming sessions.

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Okwrighty
Member
105
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM
#3
Thank you for your message! The DDR4 RAM was tested for just one day with an older MOBO Gigabyte H610M motherboard. I didn’t use it much that day, so I’m unsure if the card performed well in this setup. My SSD is a high-speed NVMe 1TB M.2 2280 drive. The Windows 11 PRO CPU and GPU temperatures are within normal ranges. In the worst case under heavy usage, the CPU reaches around 92-95°C, while the average stays between 70-80°C.
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Okwrighty
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM #3

Thank you for your message! The DDR4 RAM was tested for just one day with an older MOBO Gigabyte H610M motherboard. I didn’t use it much that day, so I’m unsure if the card performed well in this setup. My SSD is a high-speed NVMe 1TB M.2 2280 drive. The Windows 11 PRO CPU and GPU temperatures are within normal ranges. In the worst case under heavy usage, the CPU reaches around 92-95°C, while the average stays between 70-80°C.

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Darkeos
Senior Member
538
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM
#4
If you need a replacement, let me know if there was an issue with the product.
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Darkeos
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM #4

If you need a replacement, let me know if there was an issue with the product.

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LulleMS
Junior Member
10
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM
#5
Do you have Wi-Fi or a cable connection? If it's Wi-Fi, would you like to test using a cable?
Edited June 22, 2025 by leclod
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LulleMS
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM #5

Do you have Wi-Fi or a cable connection? If it's Wi-Fi, would you like to test using a cable?
Edited June 22, 2025 by leclod

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ovcoming
Member
229
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM
#6
Also tried both options. Mostly cable.
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ovcoming
09-04-2025, 08:04 AM #6

Also tried both options. Mostly cable.