[SOLVED] Hire a troubleshooter/FPS tuner?

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33tango

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Jan 12, 2012
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Is it possible to hire someone to remote in (I know, dangerous) and figure out what my FPS problem is? Maybe a business that does this? I have pretty good hardware but my FPS is always way under what people say they get with less (could be BS?) If this doesn't exist seems like a business opportunity to the uninitiated.

Thanks!
In case someone asks parts list https://pcpartpicker.com/user/33tango/saved/hD2gwP
 
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Solution
Go get Dram Calculator and Typhoon Burner software. Follow directions in TB to export the values to DC, and then after setting xmp, manually set the subtimings. You may or may not be able to change the primary timings. It helps a lot with the latency. 105 is high, you should be closer to 60.

Then search the bios advanced OC settings and manually set the fclock for 1800.

Might also set a -0.1 or 0.15v offset to vcore which brings down temps and allows the cpu to boost higher.

= faster cpu.
There is no tuner that I know of, either locally around me or over at the North America sphere. Not in the same way you can pay a tuner to tune your car, that is.

An underperforming PC can be as simple as bad driver (especially graphics drivers), thermal limit (overheating CPU and/or GPU), or otherwise bad configuration overall (either mismatched components, suboptimal overclocking settings, et cetera).

What are your specs and what game you are using to benchmark? Some games just do utter crap of optimizing their usage of hardware (see Escape from Tarkov for RAM, and PUBG on AMD cards).
 
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Is it possible to hire someone to remote in (I know, dangerous) and figure out what my FPS problem is?
Remoting in would immediately reduce the FPS making the whole thing useless.

Make sure your bios is configured correctly, mainly you should allow precision boost to get higher single core clocks instead of having all cores run at the same clock and the second mayor thing is the mem clocks.
 
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UserBenchmarks: Game 82%, Desk 90%, Work 85%
CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X - 84.3%
GPU: Nvidia RTX 2070 - 93.8%
SSD: Adata XPG SX8200 Pro NVMe PCIe M.2 1TB - 321.2%
SSD: Samsung 850 Evo 500GB - 129.1%
SSD: Adata SU655 480GB - 107.5%
RAM: G.SKILL F4 DDR4 3200 C16 2x16GB - 68.5%
MBD: Gigabyte X470 AORUS GAMING 5 WIFI

Is that what you need? @sizzling

Lately playing Valheim, getting 30-45 FPS @iPeekYou

This part concerns me: Performing below potential (4th percentile)

I'd say Valheim is the culprit here. Is it only on that game or other games like Cyberpunk 2077 (or otherwise other demanding games) performs similarly?

Given that Valheim is still on Early Access, there's bound to be performance improvements down the line. A quick Google reveals there are some simple steps to improve FPS in that game, have you checked that out?
 
UserBenchmarks: Game 82%, Desk 90%, Work 85%
CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X - 84.3%
GPU: Nvidia RTX 2070 - 93.8%
SSD: Adata XPG SX8200 Pro NVMe PCIe M.2 1TB - 321.2%
SSD: Samsung 850 Evo 500GB - 129.1%
SSD: Adata SU655 480GB - 107.5%
RAM: G.SKILL F4 DDR4 3200 C16 2x16GB - 68.5%
MBD: Gigabyte X470 AORUS GAMING 5 WIFI

Is that what you need? @sizzling

Lately playing Valheim, getting 30-45 FPS @iPeekYou

This part concerns me: Performing below potential (4th percentile)
Your RAM has not been setup and is running at 2133mhz instead of 3200mhz. That will have a significant impact on gaming performance. You need to enable DOCP in the BIOS and set it to 3200mhz. Also make sure the RAM is in the correct motherboard slots for when running 2 dimms per motherboard instructions, thus is important to ensure it can run in dual channel.

Once done please re-run the benchmark.
 
Go get Dram Calculator and Typhoon Burner software. Follow directions in TB to export the values to DC, and then after setting xmp, manually set the subtimings. You may or may not be able to change the primary timings. It helps a lot with the latency. 105 is high, you should be closer to 60.

Then search the bios advanced OC settings and manually set the fclock for 1800.

Might also set a -0.1 or 0.15v offset to vcore which brings down temps and allows the cpu to boost higher.

= faster cpu.
 
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