Hello dear Facepunch users.
I built my own computer a couple of weeks ago, and man is it fast!
The only problem that I've noticed is some crashes at random times when I play games, and also wow graphics doesn't let me set everything to "Ultra" because I must update my "Graphics card drivers" or something similar.
I've searched the web about these problems and came across that the GTX 560 TI is having this problem, and that you need to update the BIOS and/or under clock it with some MHz to make it work.
I've done the most things, and the problem remains so now I wanna sweep all the drivers because old drivers may interfere and the question is how?
If you need any necessarily information please let me know.
I have a 560 TI and it works fine for me. Update your drivers at [url]http://www.geforce.com/drivers[/url]
Already got the most up to date driver, but I might have some older driver leftovers and I want to get rid of those.
Problem is I don't know how.
bump! in desperate need of help, also I got x2 GTX 560
[QUOTE=KoTTsNoRk;37871500]bump! in desperate need of help, also I got x2 GTX 560[/QUOTE]
Did you physically SLI them? In your drivers did you make sure they were setup correctly?
As I usually don't build my own computer I don't know much about it.
Could you please explain how to check this? I've got a SLI cable between the both Chips if that's what you mean.
[QUOTE=KoTTsNoRk;37896605]As I usually don't build my own computer I don't know much about it.
Could you please explain how to check this? I've got a SLI cable between the both Chips if that's what you mean.[/QUOTE]
Yes that's what I meant. Since that wire can only fit in 1-2 correct places on the card this definitely means you got it correctly in place. SLI/CFX does cause driver issues and for some games you actually have to go into a configuration module to set it to run with SLI enabled.
Another thing to try would be to go into the Nvidia Control Panel and check to make sure you have your SLI setup correctly or turned on. If you cannot find an option like this, then go into your BIOS on startup and look for graphics card options and manually set it up from there.
And yes, it is the SLI causing the problem, not the drivers or the cards themselves.
[QUOTE=Evilan;37896774] and for some games you actually have to go into a configuration module to set it to run with SLI enabled. [/QUOTE]
And by saying configuration module you mean what? Tho it might matter because I went to the nvidia control panel and set the 3D graphics to high (enabled SLI)
I will go and test this out, do you think this will prevent further problems?
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