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The fact that its shutting down once it goes under load tells you that the PS is not enough for the draw on your system.
How did you connect your GPU? One 8pin or two? You have to connect it with two.
Oh sorry I didnt specify that. It is connected with 2x8-Pin connectors. I have 4x8-Pin connectors in total and tried them in different combinations also.
The fact that its shutting down once it goes under load tells you that the PS is not enough for the draw on your system.
Good to hear it man, enjoy your GPU
That's why I have a penchant for purchasing overpowered (OP) PSU, all my PSUs are 1kW and higher. My oldest is a Seasonic X-1250 PSU bought back in 2011/2012 IIRC, I'm running it on my soon to be retired 2nd gaming rig (i7 3960X + Vega64), gonna move it to my soon to be built 2nd rig (3900X + RX 6900 XT). I'm willing to put good money on it being able to run this new system, despite being about 10 year old now.
ive got a 7900xtx and a 5950x with crazy good undervolts that bring the same performance as an overclock but yeah recently i have been getting some freezes and stuttering. nothing is overheating. no hotspot issues, no mounting issues, all cables plugged in correctly. 2 separate pcie cables for the gpu, etc. i have an 850 plus gold psu from corsair; planning on upgrading to the 1000w next month since the cable mod cables are compatible and i'll possibly update on this then. idk i may forget lol
do you hear coil whine with the old PSU? Has the new power supply reduced/removed coil whine?
Having some coil whine on both my PSU and GPU while under high load, but I'm in quite a bad situation because my case is mini itx and there's not much space to put a full size higher wattage PSU, using a Corsair SF750 platinum
Okay, I have a Thermaltake iRGB 1250 titanium and this keeps crashing. I even went to default tuning settings. I have the red devil version of this card. 3-8 pin connections! How can I figure out why it’s crashing!
Well, some things to do first, before deciding either you'd gotten a dud (GPU or PSU).
I believe you have the PCIe power cables connected to the PCIe power output/ports on the PSU, I believe they're the red ones, right?
Remove your GPU and reinsert it, sometimes the card/GPU isn't properly seated in the PCIe x16 slot, it can lead to a number of issues.
Also, it crashes, meaning it gets to desktop? Are your chipset driver updated? You've not indicated what mobo, or system specs, you're running, so it leaves a lot of room for guess work....