GTX 1050 Ti Shuts down pc.

Denvist

Commendable
Feb 8, 2017
3
0
1,510
Hello

I've just got a new GTX 1050 Ti. I was so happy when i got it installed and turned on my pc, it seemed to work. I wanted to try out the graphics of this card since i went from a GTX 660. So i went into Dying Light. When i got into the start menu after watching all the cinematics, my PC completely shuts down instant. It shuts down instant with any game I've tried except League of Legends and WoW.

I have tried to uninstall my NVIDIA Drivers and reinstall them with the latest update and check the temperature of the card.

This is my specs of my pc:
Operating System
Windows 10 Pro 64-bit

CPU
AMD FX-4130
Zambezi 32nm Technology

RAM
8,00GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 802MHz

Motherboard
ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC. M5A97 LE R2.0 (Socket 942)

Graphics
HP 2011 (1600x900@60Hz) (Monitor)
4095MB NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti (MSI)

Storage
465GB Seagate ST3500320AS (SATA)

Optical Drives
TSSTcorp CDDVDW SH-224DB
 
Solution
This is a deeper clean than just uninstalling and reinstalling drivers, so give it a try, it's pretty quick.

If you have graphics or driver issues, one of the most common fixes is a clean uninstall and removal of your graphics drivers.

To uninstall your drivers, first download and run Display Driver Uninstaller, and follow it's recommendations of booting into safe mode and ect.
(This is a direct download link so you don't grab the wrong version)
http://www.guru3d.com/files-get/display-driver-uninstaller-download,20.html

You'll download a compressed file called "[Guru3D.com]-DDU.zip"
Right click and choose extract.
Go into the folder and run the DDU v##.##.exe
This will extract more files to this folder.
Run Display Driver...
This is a deeper clean than just uninstalling and reinstalling drivers, so give it a try, it's pretty quick.

If you have graphics or driver issues, one of the most common fixes is a clean uninstall and removal of your graphics drivers.

To uninstall your drivers, first download and run Display Driver Uninstaller, and follow it's recommendations of booting into safe mode and ect.
(This is a direct download link so you don't grab the wrong version)
http://www.guru3d.com/files-get/display-driver-uninstaller-download,20.html

You'll download a compressed file called "[Guru3D.com]-DDU.zip"
Right click and choose extract.
Go into the folder and run the DDU v##.##.exe
This will extract more files to this folder.
Run Display Driver Uninstaller.exe
Choose Yes when it asks you to boot into SafeMode.
After you've rebooted into safe mode.
When DDU comes up, if it hasn't selected your GPU manufacturer (Nvidia/AMD/Intel) then choose it from the drop down list
Press the Clean and Restart option
If a window comes up asking to disable the Windows automatic installation of display drivers click yes.

After (or before removing the old drivers, just put the new ones on the desktop or somewhere handy) rebooting back into Windows, manually download the latest drivers from Nvidia or AMD, don't use auto detect, choose you GPU model and OS from the drop down lists.
Nvidia: http://www.nvidia.com/Download/index.aspx?lang=en-us
AMD: http://support.amd.com/en-us/download
Intel: http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/detect.html
 
Solution


I checked my graphic card first by swapping it out with another pc and if the same happends its the card. If not, then its my PSU.

The graphic card worked perfectly on an another pc. So it probably is.
 


http://www.njuskalo.hr/image-bigger/kucista/napajanje-pc-raptoxx-rt-600-psp-600w-pfc-professional-series-slika-77199162.jpg

Max rated output at the 12v rails is 25A, that makes it a "300W " unit, regardless of what the issue is (my bet is on the PSU) you should change it for something that is not a fire hazard.