01-30-2015 02:12 AM - last edited on 03-06-2024 03:28 AM by ROGBot
01-30-2015 03:19 AM
01-30-2015 03:22 AM
Puffnstuff wrote:
Your old system is irrelevant unless you didn't do a clean install of windows and if you didn't then you know what your problem is.
01-30-2015 07:17 AM
01-30-2015 11:33 AM
Sparax wrote:
Hey Squall
What Graphics Drivers are you running ?
Is the Graphics Card Overclocked at all ?
A few things you could try in the mean time:
Downgrade your graphics driver to an earlier release ( i use 335.23 atm which seems pretty stable for me )
Increase the graphics cards voltage slightly
Set PhysX to your video card instead of the default Auto Select in the Nvidia Control panel
Increase the timeout detection recovery in the registry (Make a Backup before you change anything)
Use ”Run” and type ”regedit” then navigate to:
HKEYLOCALMACHINE > SYSTEM > Currentcontrolset > control > graphicsdrivers.
Right click ”graphicsdrivers”, click new >Dword, specify the name as TdrDelay and modify the value to 8
01-30-2015 11:44 AM
01-30-2015 02:47 PM
01-30-2015 03:04 PM
01-30-2015 04:37 PM
Nate152 wrote:
hello squall429
Try backing off the core speed a touch on your gpu and see if you still crash. The nvlddmkm is a gpu/driver crash.