Ok so... I've still not solved this one, so here's what's been happening this week!
I’ve had my pc a week now and I’ve been experiencing on-going graphics issues since it arrived. When I’ve had time I’ve been trying to work around them and figure out what’s actually going wrong but so far I’m getting no where.
Spec is as follows:
Intel Core i7 4790K CPU OC to 4.4GHz
Corsair H100i Water Cooler
Sabertooth Z97 Mark 1 Motherboard
NVidia GeForce GTX780Ti 3Gb Video Card
16Gb Corsair Vengeance DDR3 2400Mhz Memory
Samsung 840 Evo SSD 250Gb
Seagate 7200rpm 2Gb HDD
24x DVD-RW
Corsair RM850W PSU
Running Windows 7 64bit
The problem I’m experiencing appears to be driver related. I’m mainly playing Elder Scrolls Online but the problem persists with any game I’ve tried to play so far. In Elder Scrolls, if I edit the User Settings file and set it to run on D3D9 (DirectX 9), I can get it to run, although it does have graphics glitches where it will drop output to the displays for a second or two, then resume. If I set it to run on D3D11 (DirectX11), as soon as I get past the character selection screen and load into the world, it crashes.
It then gives me an error in my Windows System Tray saying “Display Driver has stopped responding and has recovered. Kernel Mode Driver, 337.88 stopped responding and successfully recovered”.
I’ve been running the MSI Afterburner Software as a means of monitoring the graphics cards temperatures and usages, and it doesn’t appear to be out of tolerance anywhere which leads me to think it isn’t a hardware related issue.
Some recordings of recent gameplay:
If you look at the GPU Usage statistics, where you see the GPU usage drop is where it would drop display for a second or two and then pick it up again. But it’s quite frequent.
Even under the most strenuous graphically demanding situations I’ve encountered so far the GPU never went above 65°. I have generated a custom fan curve that have the fans come on with more power sooner, but it saved around 5° over the default fan control settings.
I have tried to run 3DMark 11, and the 3DMark Demo (Available from Steam).
3DMark 11 went as follows:
Installed and loaded the software. Set it to benchmark tests only, on centred view. Pressed “Start” and it immediately turned off display. Giving the monitor the “Input Not Supported” screen that floats about, so I’m guessing that’s a resolution issue? But I couldn’t correct it as I only downloaded the Basic version and didn’t upgrade to the paid version. So, with no results, this was an unsuccessful test.
3DMark Demo went:
Installed and loaded software. Clicked on “Run all tests”, and it started to work, then crashes out with the System Tray video driver error I had before.
So, the list of things I’ve tried to correct the problem.
1. Updating drivers using GeForce Experience.
2. Updating drivers manually by uninstalling drivers using Windows Task Manager first.
3. Uninstalling drivers using Windows, installing previous driver versions.
4. Installing latest Beta version driver.
5. Updating DirectX (But the installer wouldn’t let me because the version I have is equal to, or newer than the installer).
6. I’ve checked the XMP settings in BIOS. Already set to enabled so I left it at that.
7. Reinstalling my games.
8. Custom fan curve (though I imagine this is having no effect in relation to the problem I’m having).
9. I’ve checked DxDiag and it reports no problems.
So, to sum up. Won’t play games without crashing. Won’t run 3D Mark benchmark tests. Graphics driver crashes. And I’ve run out of ideas...
I should stress that this problem is not just limited to ESO as I'd previously thought. I tried to play Warframe today and the video card drivers kept crashing.
@Elf_Boy - I'm running 2x HP w19 monitors. Running at 1440x900, 60Hz on DVI cables for both. I'm running Windows 7 x64. There is nothing running in the background that would cause any notifications to pop up, other than the graphics driver failing. And the problem I was having occurred before I started using MSI Afterburner to monitor my system. I'm starting to think it may be a defective card also. I've already emailed the company that supplied the pc to me to get the ball rolling.
Thanks for the response guys, much appreciated!