AMD?BSODs can absolutely be caused by bad programming, in fact the majority of BSODs are because of driver issues. I have used BSOD analyzers. The issue is with a few different drivers related to handling multi-threaded tasks, and it only occurs while playing ESO. It also only popped up after the first maintenance this week.
The graphic cars is an AMD one?
PC shutdowns are either a hardware, OS, or driver issue. The absolute worst thing that can happen because of a problem with the game is having the application crash.
Same 335.23, also Win 7. My crashes only started recently.I've had no crash at all, and I also have a 780ti, Core I5 2550K, windows7. I'm using 335.23, what about you?
Having the same problem. Sometimes it will happen in 3-4 hours, sometimes after only 5-10 mins. It's not a heat issue. I have 3 monitors, the middle one is where the game runs, I have my VOIP app on the left screen, and CPU, GPU, RAM and HDD monitors on the right screen and I always keep an eye on them (ever since my H110 pump failed once). Anyways, this seems to be random, there's a mem leak somewhere. In my case at least, the CPU never gets over 35C (liquid cooled 1100t @ 4.2GHz) GPU never gets over 70C (6970 2GB, high tolerance card, will hit 110C before it crashes, I've tested). HDD activity is very low (normal) and ram usage is constantly about 50-60%.
P.S. Doesn't happen on any other game. DayZ for example works my CPU like a benchmarking tool, no problems. Crysis 3 works my GPU like it's trying to deliberately kill it, again no problem. I've ran Pime95 on this setup for 48 hours, it's stable.
What tool are you using? When ESO causes my system to restart, I don't even get a minidump..BSODs can absolutely be caused by bad programming, in fact the majority of BSODs are because of driver issues. I have used BSOD analyzers. The issue is with a few different drivers related to handling multi-threaded tasks, and it only occurs while playing ESO. It also only popped up after the first maintenance this week.
Full shutdown without powering back on will be overheating related.
Sudden reboots will be a system failure event (classic BSOD) though most modern windows systems auto reboot and do it so far you miss the blue screen. I suggest turning off auto reboot on system failure in the system properties > Advanced > Startup and Recovery. Then at least you can see what is causing the faulire.
The CPU. Been using the same overclock on it for over a year now without issue.That is very odd. Since I can not see any obvious thing here, I'll ask the basic stuff, just to get them out of the way:).
Are you overclocking anything?
No, but the card is less than two weeks old, they shouldn't really need cleaning (and GPU temp is fine).Have you cleaned the fans from your gfx card? (in case of overheating).
YesHave you setup your drivers for application control (rather than full perf or quality)?
It's an SSD, so no defrag, but I run Samsung's tool once a week.Have you done a defrag recently (not really an issue nowadays on win7, but you never know:) ).
Yes to both.Has your pc got10% or more free hdd space?
Is your virtual memory 1.5 times the size of your ram?
I've never touched USB setting in the bios, but now that you mention it, I've needed to restart upnphost a couple times lately as it was pushing 50% CPU usage. I'll poke around in the bios as make sure everything is kosher.Any kind of legacy usb options activated or deactived in your bios?
YesAre windows updates up to date?
Now that you mention it, no. I'll try this.Is the application set to run as admin for all users?
Yes. I've tried turning both off completely just to make doubly sure as well.Have you added the entire eso folder to the exception of your AV/firewall?
No.Any virtual devices (virtual cd etc.) running?
Yes.Is the nvidia streaming option disabled?
I can't think of anything else right now
What tool are you using? When ESO causes my system to restart, I don't even get a minidump..BSODs can absolutely be caused by bad programming, in fact the majority of BSODs are because of driver issues. I have used BSOD analyzers. The issue is with a few different drivers related to handling multi-threaded tasks, and it only occurs while playing ESO. It also only popped up after the first maintenance this week.
HenryH3894 wrote: »Put a fan next to your vents... helps, trust me.
felixgamingx1 wrote: »Leave your case open if playing on desktop
Food4Thought wrote: »The biggest cause of equipment overheating is dust bunnies.
The second cause is the fan(s) giving out.
Both problems can impact PC performance.
I always keep a can of compressed air around for such things and I pop the hood of the PC and check the fans about 4 times a year.
A little 30 seconds of inspection and maintenance can keep your baby purring for years.
I have a sli gtx 780 and had this problem.
I noticed my card temp rising overtime.
I am playing on maximum possible settings.
What I did to control the situation was:
Download PrecisionX software from evga homepage
PrecisionX have the ability to monitor your card temp in realtime and show it on screen when you play, so I had this running and my gpu's temo would go up to 65 C within 30 minutes with fan on auto.
Then I switched the fan to manual, 55% speed and problem stopped.
Now temps never go above 50 C.
If you have old psu, it may not provide enough power to your gpu, thus resulting in pc reseting/shutting down.
Make sure you have enough system memory.
4 gb may have been enough some time ago, but current mainstream gaming pc's have 8 gb as standard. Some older pc's use triple channel memory and have 6 gb memory - these should be fine as well. If you have less than you need to upgrade. I've been minitoring memory usage and it goes above 2 gb easily.
Be sure to never ever have 110C. Maybe your computer can work with that high temperature but it drastically decrease PC components life.
I know, i have enough fans and cooling in my computer. But for some reason the Fan of my video card was not functioning correcly. So i unplugged it all and reinstalled it then set the fan manually to 90%. Then it seemed not to go over 50 degrees anymore. So just lowerd the fans speed little bit so it does not get broken fast
I think i was lucky to discover the problem early else it would have been a disaster i think
I have a sli gtx 780 and had this problem.
I noticed my card temp rising overtime.
I am playing on maximum possible settings.
What I did to control the situation was:
Download PrecisionX software from evga homepage
PrecisionX have the ability to monitor your card temp in realtime and show it on screen when you play, so I had this running and my gpu's temo would go up to 65 C within 30 minutes with fan on auto.
Then I switched the fan to manual, 55% speed and problem stopped.
Now temps never go above 50 C.
Remmeber, each card makers has a different cooling solution, hence, some cards, eventhough they are the same model, will deal with heat differently. I have a 780, from gainward, and I have 0 issue with heating.
If you have old psu, it may not provide enough power to your gpu, thus resulting in pc reseting/shutting down.
Yep, they advertise 450W mini I think, however this is not taking into consideration other elements present in your rig. If you have like 12 fans, 3 HDD's, 1 or 2 dvd/bluray, 450 is more than tight, especially if the psu date from before SLI. Nowadays, it is safer to buy a psu built for SLI, they are a lot more robust and performant than their previous models.Make sure you have enough system memory.
4 gb may have been enough some time ago, but current mainstream gaming pc's have 8 gb as standard. Some older pc's use triple channel memory and have 6 gb memory - these should be fine as well. If you have less than you need to upgrade. I've been minitoring memory usage and it goes above 2 gb easily.
Indeed, 4gb is really the minimum these days, however, even with the right amount of RAM, remember to check the optimal clock speed for your RAM, as the incorrect one can result in weird results. Overclocking it is also a risky thing as far as stability goes, and the RAM is also an element that can overheat.