I'm having GPU driver crashes and system stability problems, wondering if anybody knows what I should try next.
Solved! Go to Solution.
I found a solution. My 2 monitors were running at at different framerates. I set both to 60 Hz and my system has been stable all week, passing memtest dozens of times and around 12 hours of video editing in premiere pro. Playback performance in Premiere also improved. Such a dumb and frustrating problem.
Why can't this system handle the mismatched framerates when there's a lot of ram and/or CPU usage? No idea, but I'm leaning toward an actual driver issue. It can't be known without a way to contact AMD or see if it's a known bug.
FWIW, seagate support didn't think it was the PSU, MSI told me to try swapping in an nvidia GPU (because people just have those lying around? ). I found the problem before getting in deep with either. I wish I had a 3rd party GPU so there was a company I could have contacted about it before wasting all this pain.
With your setup .. even though Seasonic makes great PSU's .. 750wtt, I'd say is on the light side .. 850wtt would be minimum, but I'd even go higher so you have more than enough to handle transient power spikes when under 100% load with CPU, GPU and I/O .. and keep with at least 80+ Gold rating
Make sure to run separate power cables from your PSU to each power input on your GPU
Check your system's Event Viewer for logged errors that might help troubleshoot your issue
My wife's old configuration:
3700x,2x16GB 3200 ECC UDIMM's,RX 550 2GB, B550m Phantom Gaming 5, 500wtt RGB Thermaltake 80 Plus (White), Win11
..She was having issues with some driver timeouts and other oddities that "clearly" pointed to a faulty GPU
I replaced her PSU with a Segotep 600wtt 80+ Gold and all her issues went away.
That "might" be what is going on with your rig
What error does BSOD throw out in bottom of screen?
I would expect something like PAGE_FAULT_IN_NONPAGED_AREA, or MEMORY_MANAGEMENT
There are few other other BSOD's that can trigger, but most of them are possible only during boot sequence.
The lower third of the screen wasn't readable. It was a mess of mostly green and black glitches. Somewhat similar looking to what happens when a GPU overheats and or dies entirely.
Running mixed ram kits is a possible cause.
I agree with Goodplay concerning running different manufacturer's RAM kits together.
Even though they may have the same or similar specs the actual Memory chips might be completely different.
Are both Ram Kits on your Motherboard's QVL list for the 5000 series processors?
I would just run with one type of RAM kit, either G-Skill or T-Force RAM kit and see if your PC runs more stable to rule incompatible RAM sticks.
You can always run the PC with just one RAM stick and see if it is stable.
Did you run MEMTEST64 with each stick separately or with the entire kit installed?
If you are getting BSOD's while running MEMTEST64 does indicate a hardware issue. Either Incompatibility or defetive RAM or Motherboard DIMM Slots.
NOTE: Recently another User did the same thing by purchasing two different manufacturer's kits but with the same specs. He later found out that the Memory chips from each kit was made from different manufacturers. One Kit Memory chips was Micron and the other Ram kit Memory chips was Hynix.
EDIT: Ryzen processors are fairly sensitive to the type of RAM that is installed. As for compatibility issues, I once had a 4 RAM Stick kit of 4GB each (16 GB kit). One of the RAM sticks went bad using MEMTEST64.
Opened a Corsair Warranty ticket. They wanted me to send in the entire 4 stick kit to be replaced which would have left me without a computer for an extended time. I asked why they just couldn't send me one Stick of the same type. Corsair said due to incompatibility issues which they couldn't guarantee.
For the problem of mismatched RAM, I spent around 8 hours trying most socket and RAM combinations. Ended up cutting myself pretty bad on one of those corsair heatsinks.
I had tried running each individual stick in each individual slot. Using pairs from either manufacturer in different slot combinations also didn't work
Thanks for the update.
I solved my Corsair RAM problem by just purchasing the same RAM stick as in the kit except as a single RAM stick. Worked without any issues.
I found a solution. My 2 monitors were running at at different framerates. I set both to 60 Hz and my system has been stable all week, passing memtest dozens of times and around 12 hours of video editing in premiere pro. Playback performance in Premiere also improved. Such a dumb and frustrating problem.
Why can't this system handle the mismatched framerates when there's a lot of ram and/or CPU usage? No idea, but I'm leaning toward an actual driver issue. It can't be known without a way to contact AMD or see if it's a known bug.
FWIW, seagate support didn't think it was the PSU, MSI told me to try swapping in an nvidia GPU (because people just have those lying around? ). I found the problem before getting in deep with either. I wish I had a 3rd party GPU so there was a company I could have contacted about it before wasting all this pain.
I find it really strange that running 2 Monitors at different Resolutions would cause all those problems with RAM and GPU and BSOD errors.
Your GPU shouldn't have any issues supporting two different Resolutions at the same time in my opinion.
By the way, Good troubleshooting for finding a fix for such a rare problem.
I agree, it was hard to find the problem because I never would have expected it.
Maybe a resolution mismatch causes the system to hit the memory a lot more? Maybe the PCI-e bus starves when the memory bus is overloaded? Don't know.
The mismatched system seemed fine, outside of memtest and premiere.
I wish I had 2x 144Hz monitors to try seeing if the problem is the mismatch or just from running above 60Hz, in general.
The problem still happens with the 1080p monitor at 60Hz and the 1440p monitor at 120 Hz.