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Troubleshooting Low Frame Rate and Stuttering Issues When Gaming on a Television via HDMI

Troubleshooting Low Frame Rate and Stuttering Issues When Gaming on a Television via HDMI

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donam1910
Junior Member
1
04-30-2018, 08:02 PM
#1
I am experiencing an issue with my MSI GS75 laptop (equipped with a 2080 Max-Q) when gaming on a Philips 43PUS6501 4K TV. Despite running games at 1920x1080 resolution, frame rates consistently hover between 20 and 50 FPS, rarely exceeding 60, even in simple titles like Overcooked 2. A Way Out exhibits similar stuttering and frame drops, fluctuating between 15 and over 100 FPS. GPU usage remains low, typically between 10 and 50%, leading me to suspect this is the root cause. I have updated my NVIDIA drivers, toggled VSync, utilized the eGPU as the preferred graphics card, tested various HDMI cables, enabled Game Mode on the TV, and experimented with different Windows display modes. CPU temperatures average 75-80°C during gaming, peaking at 73°C, which is considered optimal for a laptop. I lack alternative displays for testing. Assistance would be greatly appreciated.
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donam1910
04-30-2018, 08:02 PM #1

I am experiencing an issue with my MSI GS75 laptop (equipped with a 2080 Max-Q) when gaming on a Philips 43PUS6501 4K TV. Despite running games at 1920x1080 resolution, frame rates consistently hover between 20 and 50 FPS, rarely exceeding 60, even in simple titles like Overcooked 2. A Way Out exhibits similar stuttering and frame drops, fluctuating between 15 and over 100 FPS. GPU usage remains low, typically between 10 and 50%, leading me to suspect this is the root cause. I have updated my NVIDIA drivers, toggled VSync, utilized the eGPU as the preferred graphics card, tested various HDMI cables, enabled Game Mode on the TV, and experimented with different Windows display modes. CPU temperatures average 75-80°C during gaming, peaking at 73°C, which is considered optimal for a laptop. I lack alternative displays for testing. Assistance would be greatly appreciated.

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220
05-02-2018, 09:32 AM
#2
The GPU can easily handle that task itself; experimentation is permissible.

You switched from driver 431.70 to 431.60 due to issues.

An HDMI 1.4 connection limits you to 4k at 24Hz, not 4k at 60Hz.
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XxEmmyLouWhoxX
05-02-2018, 09:32 AM #2

The GPU can easily handle that task itself; experimentation is permissible.

You switched from driver 431.70 to 431.60 due to issues.

An HDMI 1.4 connection limits you to 4k at 24Hz, not 4k at 60Hz.

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SGgamingDK
Member
222
05-02-2018, 09:14 PM
#3
The likely cause is a combination of: the 2080 Max-Q’s power limits, which are either 80w or 90w depending on the model, and the Mobile 2080's 150w limit; the card is not capable of running at 4k. The 2080 Max-Q performs similarly to the GTX 1070, which also performed poorly at 4k.
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SGgamingDK
05-02-2018, 09:14 PM #3

The likely cause is a combination of: the 2080 Max-Q’s power limits, which are either 80w or 90w depending on the model, and the Mobile 2080's 150w limit; the card is not capable of running at 4k. The 2080 Max-Q performs similarly to the GTX 1070, which also performed poorly at 4k.

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kadenthehunter
Junior Member
5
05-03-2018, 04:34 AM
#4
Is this a 90W model? If the game is set to 1920x1080, will it run in 4K?
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kadenthehunter
05-03-2018, 04:34 AM #4

Is this a 90W model? If the game is set to 1920x1080, will it run in 4K?

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united32
Senior Member
433
05-08-2018, 11:15 AM
#5
The screen should be surrounded by large black boxes. Adjust resolution scaling in Windows or Nvidia Optimus settings, prioritizing the dominant program.
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united32
05-08-2018, 11:15 AM #5

The screen should be surrounded by large black boxes. Adjust resolution scaling in Windows or Nvidia Optimus settings, prioritizing the dominant program.

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imTri
Posting Freak
786
05-08-2018, 10:14 PM
#6
It’s indeed 4K, however, why is the GPU usage so low? It doesn’t approach 100% utilization.
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imTri
05-08-2018, 10:14 PM #6

It’s indeed 4K, however, why is the GPU usage so low? It doesn’t approach 100% utilization.

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melio01
Member
64
05-13-2018, 04:33 PM
#7
If it is not overheating, it is due to exceeding the card’s power limits, as determined by the manufacturer.
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melio01
05-13-2018, 04:33 PM #7

If it is not overheating, it is due to exceeding the card’s power limits, as determined by the manufacturer.

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derk4321
Senior Member
482
05-15-2018, 09:21 AM
#8
Can I monitor if it’s hitting the power limit using Afterburner? Could undervolting impact it? The undervolt is super stable on my laptop, but I've never connected it to a 4K TV to game. One last thing I noticed after playing with some settings (I can't remember which cause I was messing around a lot), is that if I duplicate the display, it locks to 59 fps on the TV, but still drops semi frequently. If I switch to only on the TV, it drops immediately.
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derk4321
05-15-2018, 09:21 AM #8

Can I monitor if it’s hitting the power limit using Afterburner? Could undervolting impact it? The undervolt is super stable on my laptop, but I've never connected it to a 4K TV to game. One last thing I noticed after playing with some settings (I can't remember which cause I was messing around a lot), is that if I duplicate the display, it locks to 59 fps on the TV, but still drops semi frequently. If I switch to only on the TV, it drops immediately.

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polo56
Junior Member
24
05-21-2018, 09:58 AM
#9
MSI Afterburner and GPU-Z can monitor power consumption. It depends on the size of the undervolt. That's Windows doing something funny; I don’t understand it myself. If I go to Display > Advanced Display Settings, Windows will show my monitor has a 143Hz refresh rate. Manually selecting 144Hz and hitting Apply doesn’t do anything. It doesn’t really matter; NVCP shows the correct number though. With the exception of still images, browsing, movies/YouTube – the light duty stuff, the card can’t smoothly run at 4K – although they’ll advertise it as 4K capable. It’s nowhere near the performance of an RTX 2080 (desktop). What kind of cable do you have connected to the TV? DP 1.2, 1.4? HDMI 1.4, 2.0?
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polo56
05-21-2018, 09:58 AM #9

MSI Afterburner and GPU-Z can monitor power consumption. It depends on the size of the undervolt. That's Windows doing something funny; I don’t understand it myself. If I go to Display > Advanced Display Settings, Windows will show my monitor has a 143Hz refresh rate. Manually selecting 144Hz and hitting Apply doesn’t do anything. It doesn’t really matter; NVCP shows the correct number though. With the exception of still images, browsing, movies/YouTube – the light duty stuff, the card can’t smoothly run at 4K – although they’ll advertise it as 4K capable. It’s nowhere near the performance of an RTX 2080 (desktop). What kind of cable do you have connected to the TV? DP 1.2, 1.4? HDMI 1.4, 2.0?

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snoepjez
Member
60
05-21-2018, 01:20 PM
#10
I will monitor this and provide updates when possible; the application may be delayed due to vacation. The undervolt is set to -0.125V, utilizing Throttlestop with a scheduled task for startup/login. It's connected via HDMI cable, assumed to be 1.4.
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snoepjez
05-21-2018, 01:20 PM #10

I will monitor this and provide updates when possible; the application may be delayed due to vacation. The undervolt is set to -0.125V, utilizing Throttlestop with a scheduled task for startup/login. It's connected via HDMI cable, assumed to be 1.4.

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