Hoping to get lucky, maybe somebody knows a fix.
Anyway, I've been reading around for like the past two months clawing out my eyes trying to figure out a fix to this. I have two GTX 460s that ran SLI fine on an EVGA 1156 board I had. That board got some physical damage to it, and I couldn't afford to buy a new CPU so I had to find a new 1156 board. I eventually settled for an ASUS P7P55D PRO (SLI compatible), and to my dismay I haven't been able to run SLI for months without the nvidia drivers crashing and resetting. I've yet to find a fix to this.
[b]Things I've tried:[/b]
I tested ALL of my hardware in other friends systems. All of it. Over and over. Everything ran just fine on my old board anyway.
I've tried over 10 nvidia driver versions.
I've tried multiple complete clean installs of windows.
I at one point thought it could be hard drive related, so I ended up buying a brand new hard drive. Same results.
I tried an asus BIOS updater that was a .exe, didn't fix anything. (you can't flash your bios on asus boards without the actual support DVD, some shit about DOS or something)
I've tried 3 SLI bridges and every single slot variation.
The board runs fine with a single card. No errors, at all. All of my hardware is 100% too, and there are no compatibility issues. For whatever fucking reason this board absolutely refuses to allow me to have SLI enabled without crashing. I'm close to just saying fuck it, and attempting to buy a new board with a 2600K.
I think the board's fucked.
If you do get a new board, get a 2500K, there's no performance benefit to the 2600 in games.
If the cards work together correctly without SLI enabled, have you tried SLIPatch?
[QUOTE=Darkimmortal;33654468]If the cards work together correctly without SLI enabled, have you tried SLIPatch?[/QUOTE]
What's that?
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