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pjelite
Junior Member
5
11-25-2024, 05:32 PM
#1
Hello everyone, I’m really struggling to find the right words. In early February, I purchased a setup including an i9 14900k, MSI Z790I EDGE WIFI (though I still use LAN), a 4070 TI Super OC Palit, two 32 GB G.Skill Trident NEO 6000 RAM sticks, a Thermaltake Toughpower 80+ Gold 1000W PSU, a Kingston FURY Renegade Gen.4, and a 2TB NVMe M.2 SSD. I updated the BIOS, performed a full Windows reinstall, and started playing games. Then I noticed a persistent stuttering issue—no matter what I do, it happens whenever I move the mouse, change characters, or interact with anything. I tried XMP profiles, overclocking, reverting to defaults, high performance settings, DDU, removing front USBs from the motherboard, using a new 12VHPWR cable for the GPU, installing new RAM sticks, tweaking the registry, and even reinstalling Windows multiple times (including trying Windows 11). Still nothing. After all that effort, the problem remains. I ended up selling the processor and bought a 9800X3D, a new motherboard (MSI B650I Edge Wifi), and an additional watercooler (Arctic II). The stuttering persists even with the new components—during installation I essentially disassembled everything and reassembled it. The games run smoothly between the interruptions. Right now, I’m completely confused. Could anyone help? Please share any insights. This is really frustrating. I’ll post some screenshots from Elden Ring and DayZ, plus HWMonitor images if you think they’ll be useful.
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pjelite
11-25-2024, 05:32 PM #1

Hello everyone, I’m really struggling to find the right words. In early February, I purchased a setup including an i9 14900k, MSI Z790I EDGE WIFI (though I still use LAN), a 4070 TI Super OC Palit, two 32 GB G.Skill Trident NEO 6000 RAM sticks, a Thermaltake Toughpower 80+ Gold 1000W PSU, a Kingston FURY Renegade Gen.4, and a 2TB NVMe M.2 SSD. I updated the BIOS, performed a full Windows reinstall, and started playing games. Then I noticed a persistent stuttering issue—no matter what I do, it happens whenever I move the mouse, change characters, or interact with anything. I tried XMP profiles, overclocking, reverting to defaults, high performance settings, DDU, removing front USBs from the motherboard, using a new 12VHPWR cable for the GPU, installing new RAM sticks, tweaking the registry, and even reinstalling Windows multiple times (including trying Windows 11). Still nothing. After all that effort, the problem remains. I ended up selling the processor and bought a 9800X3D, a new motherboard (MSI B650I Edge Wifi), and an additional watercooler (Arctic II). The stuttering persists even with the new components—during installation I essentially disassembled everything and reassembled it. The games run smoothly between the interruptions. Right now, I’m completely confused. Could anyone help? Please share any insights. This is really frustrating. I’ll post some screenshots from Elden Ring and DayZ, plus HWMonitor images if you think they’ll be useful.

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Majcio
Junior Member
6
11-29-2024, 07:14 PM
#2
You haven't mentioned any issues yet. Just let me know if you're experiencing problems with Windows 10 or 11.
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Majcio
11-29-2024, 07:14 PM #2

You haven't mentioned any issues yet. Just let me know if you're experiencing problems with Windows 10 or 11.

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117
12-01-2024, 07:53 AM
#3
It seems you didn't mention it, but thank you for noticing. I'm using Windows 10, though I also tried Windows 11 without much change except for a slight drop in FPS. I went back to Windows 10 because it's simpler to handle.
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whitecastle200
12-01-2024, 07:53 AM #3

It seems you didn't mention it, but thank you for noticing. I'm using Windows 10, though I also tried Windows 11 without much change except for a slight drop in FPS. I went back to Windows 10 because it's simpler to handle.

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BeardDesign
Junior Member
21
12-01-2024, 01:40 PM
#4
It seems like your question is a bit unclear. Could you clarify whether you're asking about stuttering in specific games, your computer's performance, or something else? I'm here to help with any details you provide!
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BeardDesign
12-01-2024, 01:40 PM #4

It seems like your question is a bit unclear. Could you clarify whether you're asking about stuttering in specific games, your computer's performance, or something else? I'm here to help with any details you provide!

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HannibalPlays
Junior Member
47
12-02-2024, 07:05 AM
#5
There appears to be a GPU utilization limit reaching 348.9%. The Kingston SNVS500G seems to be nearing overheating at 85°C as noted by Sensor 2. This might not be connected to the problem, and other metrics look typical since frame rate is limited to 60 FPS.
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HannibalPlays
12-02-2024, 07:05 AM #5

There appears to be a GPU utilization limit reaching 348.9%. The Kingston SNVS500G seems to be nearing overheating at 85°C as noted by Sensor 2. This might not be connected to the problem, and other metrics look typical since frame rate is limited to 60 FPS.

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segoli2
Junior Member
28
12-03-2024, 05:42 AM
#6
Only when the window opens. Inside the window, it pauses for a full second or two. Outside of that, everything appears normal and there’s no lag.
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segoli2
12-03-2024, 05:42 AM #6

Only when the window opens. Inside the window, it pauses for a full second or two. Outside of that, everything appears normal and there’s no lag.

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Bomber783
Member
181
12-03-2024, 05:57 AM
#7
This refers to your secondary storage drive. It holds personal files and data. You're wondering why it gets warm even when not heavily used. The term "GPU copy maximum" relates to how much data the graphics processing unit can handle at once, affecting performance.
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Bomber783
12-03-2024, 05:57 AM #7

This refers to your secondary storage drive. It holds personal files and data. You're wondering why it gets warm even when not heavily used. The term "GPU copy maximum" relates to how much data the graphics processing unit can handle at once, affecting performance.

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LiGhT_HawKs
Junior Member
24
12-04-2024, 12:00 AM
#8
I'm not completely certain, but seeing values above 100% doesn't seem typical. You might want to use GPU-Z to record the GPU usage stats. In GPU-Z, go to the "sensors" section and double-click the middle tab for each reading to see the maximums.
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LiGhT_HawKs
12-04-2024, 12:00 AM #8

I'm not completely certain, but seeing values above 100% doesn't seem typical. You might want to use GPU-Z to record the GPU usage stats. In GPU-Z, go to the "sensors" section and double-click the middle tab for each reading to see the maximums.

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samy1002
Member
186
12-04-2024, 03:32 AM
#9
I'll attempt it and share the findings once you post them. Let me know if you need any adjustments.
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samy1002
12-04-2024, 03:32 AM #9

I'll attempt it and share the findings once you post them. Let me know if you need any adjustments.

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white_tiger00
Junior Member
21
12-05-2024, 04:51 AM
#10
tried another NVME yesterday just to be safe. didn't do much, but it's still stuttering. probably not the graphics card, monitor, or power supply—maybe something else is the issue. confirmed with a specialist that there are no interrupt or latency problems.
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white_tiger00
12-05-2024, 04:51 AM #10

tried another NVME yesterday just to be safe. didn't do much, but it's still stuttering. probably not the graphics card, monitor, or power supply—maybe something else is the issue. confirmed with a specialist that there are no interrupt or latency problems.

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