06-02-2017 08:12 PM
02-24-2018 12:12 PM
nulmas wrote:
Download an application called GPU-Z and check if the memory used in your GPU is from Micron.
02-24-2018 01:30 PM
danmaku wrote:
It's from Samsung. I wish there was some diagnostic software that could run in the background that could help isolate the specific crash cause. When playing Arkham Knight, my GPU core clock and load gets pretty high but the temps stay in the 70s
03-09-2018 01:20 PM
03-14-2018 04:13 PM
03-19-2018 03:02 AM
03-19-2018 01:41 PM
Spankmaster wrote:
Hey everybody, just wanted to give my few cents to this topic as I was also affected by the ominous crashes with my G752VS.
First of all THX to everybody to have given me several ways of approache trying to solve this issue.
Personally I could not believe that it is a damaged or not proper working hardware or better to say a classical defect.
Sure some people whose board was changed by RMA could solve this problem but honestly that would have been my really last possibility
or even send it back within my 14 days return back period (here in GER just send it back and cancel the deal).
I tried fresh windows installation, deleting ROG center, undervolting GPU voltage, trying another VBios etc... nothing worked.
Then after some days of analyzing while using tools like GPU-Z to monitor voltage, core clock etc. I could realize that the problem should be the GPU clock speed.
In stock settings my GTX1070 reaches a max clock speed of up to 1860 MHz which is not a problem at all since the GPU temperature is at max. 70°.
BUT: The problem is that this max clock speed only appears with almost no GPU load. So we are not talking about a 100% load and high clock speed (how it should be with the new Pascal boost technology) but high clock speed without load.
As the voltage of the new Pascal boost technology changes permanently according to the clock speed and GPU load the failure is there!
The GPU boosts to 1860 MHz with a valid voltage of 1,062V (seems to be ok) but it boosts up to that clock speed in probably a very short millisecond.
The voltage needed (1,062V) increases to that value little later than the clock speed, means that the internal automatic OC (Pascal boost) is faster than the voltage increase to keep that clock speed alive.
This causes the crashes. Since I set a custom speed and voltage curve in MSI afterbruner, limiting the max boost to 1700 MHz (you have to set it little below that value) no crashes anymore. I played hours of the former crushed game like Heroes of the Storm -> no crashes anymore.
What you can do afterwards is to check and identify the max speed without getting the voltage being increased to 1,062V.
Believe me it should not cost you any significant fps compared to the stock setting.
To summarize: Do not allow your GPU to reach 1,062V in any scenario to be safe. Find a manual set curve with MSI afterurner to identify your max possible clock speed without reaching 1,062V at all. Your performance will be most probably equal to stock setting, you will not loose any significant performance.
Enjoy your laptop! 🙂
03-20-2018 01:24 AM
03-31-2018 02:44 PM
07-06-2018 05:51 PM