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fenix144
Adept I

rx 6800 xt green screen desktop crash

So I've just bought this new msi rx 6800 xt gaming x trio, which I was super stocked about, it replacing my ageing gtx 1080. So I install it, system boots just fine. Great, I install the drivers. First desktop crash after just having installed the drivers... hmmkk. Maybe just a fluke. After a hard reboot, promptly crashes again. So I've run through a bunch of solutions, installing drivers, uninstalling, ddu etc. So far no luck. Any of this sounds familiar to anyone?

More info: 

Windows 10 desktop pc version 2004

CPU: ryzen 5 3600x

RAM: Corsair vengeance 3200mhz 16gb 2x8 CL14

MOBO: Asrock steel legend b450

Drivers: Both most recent ones, 2020-20.11.2 and 2020-21.1.1

Displays: Old ass asus 24" 60hz 1080p VS247 on HDMI and a Gigabyte G27Q 1440p 144hz on displayport

PSU: Corsair HX750 750watts of course

 

26 Replies
Bossco82
Adept I

Hi there,

I have this exact same problem. Again it's a MSI 6800xt gaming X. System specs.

5600x

Msi X570 

Corsair 3200 ddr4 Amd optimised 

Sabrent nvme 

Corsair TX750 ran my Msi 2080ti perfectly 

Everything is fine until I install the Radeon drivers. That's now using a fresh clean install of Windows 10 2004 64bit.

Any ideas??

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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are you useing Displayport, if so try a converter to hdmi it works on mine crashes every time i plug in direct displayport to display port can run any converter tried up to 4k as i dont have any 8k displays to test this but i can run super res at 8k

 

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mackbolan777
Forerunner

Try reinstalling the driver but first use DDU to fully uninstall both Nvidia and the AMD drivers on there now. Here's a link: Display Driver Uninstaller Download version 18.0.3.6 (guru3d.com)

Do this uninstallation in safe mode. Also be disconnected from the internet while doing the process to avoid AMD installing the latest driver for the card, until we see if this driver 21.1.1 works ok. If all is ok, disable the auto-update driver feature in the Radeon settings, while letting it "search" for the latest, prevent it from installing automatically. This gives you time to read the "release notes" to see if the newer package has anything to offer you or any fixes you need. If not, leave your current working driver alone.

You'll also want to use 2 X PCIe power cables vs. the single with a dongle design for this card. In fact, I recommend it on any card with 2 power plugs. The single cable is capable of 300W and 9A max. The card can spike as high as 2.5w per frame and use 14A easily. So running 2 cables is the right way to do it.

Still having issues, drop down to the one monitor running the DP port and see if that fixes it. I know you state having done some of these steps, but maybe you forgot to do it in safe mode? Or lacking 2 x PCIe power cables off the PSU plugged into the card, which I know for a fact your PSU has, can be a problem. You can also try the older 20.12.1 driver, I use that one on a non-XT RX 6800. Windows version might matter as the latest is the 20H2 and I had an issue with the last update when it was still the 2004. Reinstalling the OS is another choice that may benefit you if you grab the latest install from Microsoft using the Media Creation Tool and wiping the drive to start from scratch. That's kind of what I did inadvertently, when I upgraded the SSD a month before getting the RX 6800, so I might have dodged something there.

This might be obvious, but make sure the card is seated right and that no RAM got knocked loose installing that huge card. Hopefully, you laid the PC on it's side to avoid PCIe slot damage from the weight.

"It worked before you broke it!"
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Thanks for replying Mackbolan. I've been building computers for 20 years and have tried all that. I'm also now running a fresh Windows install. Especially the psu cables I always use 2 separate cables. 

For any suspect on my psu I tried putting my 2080ti back in this afternoon and it worked. So there can't be any pcie or ddr4 problems either.

Only thing I haven't tried is the 20.12.1 drivers, thanks for that suggestion.

 

Well then you have the same amount of experience as me in years of building PC's. That means you also know that MSI isn't the best brand as well. Given the problems with the Merc's, don't be surprised if the card is defective.

"It worked before you broke it!"
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Wayzzz999
Journeyman III

I have the same problem 6800XT MSI. I tried everything including reinstalling windows

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Wayzzz999
Journeyman III

Did u find a solution?

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I have been having a similar problem with my MSI RX 6800 XT Gaming Trio X as well.

Mine is OK for normal operation.  But Elite Dangerous will crash to reboot quite often when jumping to another system.

If I down clock it to 2200.  It is stable, but can have a slight hitch in the load screen every once in a while where the fps and power nose dive for an instant.  I have further taken 5% of the power limit out and haven't seen the hitch in a few nights.

I have tried running RAM at 2133, tried the last 3 drivers, tried the last 2 BIOSes for the MB.  This system has been stable with my old GTX 970 since November.  Waiting for a video card.

I think it might be a PSU issue.  There are lots of people out there with 750-850W who are shutting down or rebooting because the card draws too much power for an instant. Mine certainly seems to follow the same behaviour, but I only have the one software that it happens with.

I have run Timespy, Heaven, Kombuster with furmark, MSFS2020, Overwatch, PC Builder Sim.  All without problems.  Not a single problem, except Elite Dangerous system jumping.  It's down to PSU or driver/power curve too agressive for that particular operation.  Until they can get data on it and fix it, I will just down tune my card a bit.

I might Amazon a 1000W PSU and see if that fixes it.  It's free to try at any rate.  PSUs are soo expensive now, and hard to find.

 

Nothing fancy, but good quality system.  No OC on anything.

EVGA 750 Supernova G2, Ryzen 5600x, Strix X570 E Gaming, RX 6800 XT Gaming Trio X, 2 x 16GB Trident Z Neo 3600CL16. 3x SSD, 1 HDD, 2 LED strips.

 

 

 

 

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Try moving your min/max GPU clocks to within 100Mhz to see if that stops the sudden power draw. Also set the VRAM to "fast" if it's not yet. 

"It worked before you broke it!"
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I tried everything possible. MSI cards are junk. 

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No, they are "very pretty junk". Seriously, I think they're junk myself. If they spent more time in R&D and less in RGB, they might get some where. Years ago, like before 2014 they were decent. Post UEFI, mostly junk. I did have one good GPU from them but it was a 1080i Nvidia Duke with no RGB. 

Just RMA the thing and see what happens. Or Buy an RX 6800 Gigabyte 16G, not the Gaming OC, because the fans suck on the OC model and it should work perfectly.

"It worked before you broke it!"
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Cookies
Journeyman III

This could be an issue I have found while running my 6800 xt on TV, I'm just a Highschool nerd so no expert and can't explain it, but might lead you on the right path... I was running my PC on living room TV, would get random crashes to green screen often when idol, or just web browsing... tried many solutions like you, from swapping around hardware to Uninstaller and reinstalling drivers, firmware... blah blah - then someone mentioned to me it could be an issue with HDMI handshaking for somereason, my display is only 60Hz (I noticed you have a 60Hz display as well)... and I was suggested to go into my Windows and Radeon display settings and make sure everything was locked and set for the correct resolution and Hz... so far have not had an issue in 3 days which is an improvement, as before it was happening like 1-2 times a day.

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tallyhipp
Journeyman III

try a converter from displayport to HDMI for your main screen i have the same issaue same GPU and as long as i use DP to HDMI no probs at all im not happy with this but it is working and my card even destroyed my windows during the first week of trying to work out what was going on.

 

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Update to this thread i ahve now found elswhere in these forums to set VRAM to fast setting and have not had a crash for over an hour on DP to DP i think this has fixed the issue or it was the new driver that was released today whichever mine seems to be working now

 

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tallyhipp
Journeyman III

had this issue with MSI gaming x trio 6800 xt until i found out through local store and then on here that you need to set VRAM timing to fast and that should fix your prob.

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So i have been crashing to green screen on my 6800xt, sometimes right when i boot into widows, so i set the VRM timing to fast, just wondering if that has still fixed the problem for you and if you have had anymore crashes yourself since changing it to fast vrm timing?

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I have also been crashing to green screen on my 6800xt, i am going to take your suggestion and set VRM to fast timing.

Just wondering if this has worked for you since you changed it, or is it still green screen crashing?

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jlangley124
Adept I

was your Gigabyte display G-Sync by chance?

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Ive had issues with my ASUS RX 6800 crashing aswell. 

Specs: x570p, rx 6800 strix, 32gb trident ram, 1tb nvme, 750w psu. 

I've had other cards in the system with no issues, 2080ti, 1080, rx 580. Memtest for ram passed. Tried different drivers, bios, windows installs. All the jazz with reinstalling drivers. Will try newest radeon software update with fast timings. All I usually deal with are crash to desktop out of games. Still a pointless bug on this price range.

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I am having the same problem with my Gigabyte 6800 xt OC.

The only setting I did not really test was the fast timing since that sounded like it would likely enhance the problem instead of help it. 

Some poster also mentioned 60 Hertz monitors...all of mine are 60 hz.

My monitors also do not have display ports, but I guess I could try a DP to HDMI adapter.

I will say one thing I am not seeing mentioned is that mine crashes with vertical artifacts in the bios if I am in there looking at settings, but only does the screen crash if I am in windows.  Also, my 5700 xt works without any issues.

 

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Had the same crash just now. Browsing the web on firefox, screen went green, then stopped outputting graphics. Neither my GPU or Mobo HDMI port output anything, though while my mobo port registered as no signal, my GPU one did not.

I should note, it had no issue playing demanding titles at max settings, so I'm unsure what the issue could be for this to happen while browsing reddit of all activities.

I am using a 60hz monitor, though I'm not sure how much that means, given their prevalence. More to the point, I was using Freescync over HDMI. I've turned off freesync, and turned on fast timing for my vram. If I don't update here, it probably helped. I'll try to remember to update either way.

 

System:

CPU: AMD 2400G
Mobo: Gigabyte B450 Aorus Elite
RAM: 32 Gb, Corsair Vengeance LPX, 2x 8gb@3000mhz + 2x 8gb@3200mhz 
GPU: (Brand-new-got-it-8-hours-ago) XFX 6800xt Merc319
PSU: EVGA SuperNOVA 850 G5
Monitor: ASUS 23.8" IPS VA24DQ

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Since making those settings changes (Turned off Freesync, turned on fast vram),  a week ago, the crashing has gone away, so I'm confident it fixed the issue! Thanks!

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slowly but surely the issues you encounter might or will get worse. mine got so bad that even leaving the computer idle gets a green screen crash. it became almost impossible to continue using my tuf rx6800xt  that i had to swap in my old gtx1070. <--- works perfectly fine btw

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doggystyl3D
Journeyman III

it's the HDMI and some sort of a software related bug for sure because everything was working perfectly fine before. but waiting for AMD to provide a fix just so that i can use my pc to me is unacceptable since i can't even watch youtube without the screen going green and crashing. so i decided to swap my 6800xt with my old gtx1070 and guess what, everything works fine. I can play fallout 4 on ultra settings with my gtx1070 without a single green screen crash, but not with my rx6800xt which has ddr6 and double the amount of ram. never have I had a GPU which cause me not to be able to use my pc and even the integrated graphic does its job with minimal fuss. switching to display port isn't a solution it's ignoring the problem. 

 

btw repetitive green screen crash and constant on off restart will spoil your ram apparently, because I have 1 8gb stick which i can no longer use. so in short AMD rx6800xt didn't just malfunction on itself, it also causes other pc hardware to break. those who wasted their time doing fresh install of windows, re-slotting the gpu, wasted their money getting new hdmi cables or replacing other hardware have AMD to thank for that.

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johndirect
Journeyman III

It sounds like you're experiencing stability issues with your new MSI RX 6800 XT, and you've already tried several troubleshooting steps. Given your setup and the symptoms you described, here are a few additional steps and considerations that might help resolve the issue:

1. Check Power Supply Connections

  • Ensure that all power connectors to the RX 6800 XT are securely connected. The card usually requires both an 8-pin and a 6-pin PCIe power connector. Sometimes reseating these connectors can resolve intermittent issues.

2. Monitor Temperatures

  • Use software like MSI Afterburner or GPU-Z to monitor the GPU temperatures. Ensure that the card is not overheating during operation, as overheating can lead to instability and crashes.

3. Check System Power

  • Verify that your power supply (Corsair HX750) is adequate for the RX 6800 XT. While 750W should generally be sufficient, ensure that there are no issues with power delivery, such as fluctuations or instability.

4. BIOS Update

  • Ensure that your motherboard BIOS is up to date. Sometimes BIOS updates can provide better compatibility and stability, especially with newer graphics cards like the RX 6800 XT.

5. Driver Cleanup and Reinstallation

  • Use Display Driver Uninstaller (DDU) in Safe Mode to completely uninstall your current GPU drivers. Then, reinstall the latest AMD drivers from scratch. Ensure you download the drivers directly from AMD's website to get the latest version.

6. Disable Hardware Acceleration

  • In some cases, applications that use hardware acceleration (like web browsers) can cause instability. Try disabling hardware acceleration in applications such as Chrome or Firefox to see if it improves stability. njmcdirect

7. Check for System Updates

  • Ensure that Windows 10 is fully updated via Windows Update. Sometimes, system updates can resolve compatibility issues or bugs that could be causing instability.

8. Test GPU in Another System (if possible)

  • If you have access to another system, try installing the RX 6800 XT in that system to see if the stability issues persist. This can help determine if the issue is with the GPU itself or with your current system configuration.
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doggystyl3D
Journeyman III

i just wrote that replacing my rx6800xt with my old gtx1070 stopped the green screen crash even when using HDMI. and this moron comes with his copy paste instructions on how to further waste your time and money. 

 

*you don't test gpu on another system you moron, you test different gpu on the system. 

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