Dec 1, 2024
1
0
10
Hello,

One and a half years ago I purchased a used ASUS TUF 3080 10GB. Its been worked well. Two days ago I started crashing in Witcher 3. after about 30-50min of playtime I though it might be due to some memory leak within the game as it was the only game that I was crashing in. After few more crashes I went to the Event Viewer and noticed that Nvidia driver is causing the crash.

The description for Event ID 153 from source nvlddmkm cannot be found. Either the component that raises this event is not installed on your local computer or the installation is corrupted. You can install or repair the component on the local computer.

If the event originated on another computer, the display information had to be saved with the event.

The following information was included with the event:

\Device\Video3
Error occurred on GPUID: 800

Does anyone know what exactly is GPUID 800 or event ID 153?

I DDU my drivers and installed the latest ones, but I was still crashing, now in other games. I ran FurMark, Superposition and 3DMark stress test to try to replicate this behavior, but everything ran without issues. However if I got into more intensive game, I would crash - sometimes after 10 min, sometimes after 3 hours. No pattern whatsoever. I tried every potential fix. I decided to underclock my GPU to 1670Mhz Core Clock. So far, I haven't crashed yet, time will tell if helps. It seems that my GPU core is unstable and unable to work reliably on the factory clocks (not sure why the stress tests are not crashing it) I'm loosing about 15% of performance (Based on Superposition benchmark) with my underclock.

I filtered all errors from event logs for this year and it turns out I have been experiencing this as far as logs go, I just never thought of looking into them. Turns out every crash I had within a game was caused by this error. Is this behavior a sign that my GPU is giving out? Is there anything I can test/try?

Appreciate any help!
 
Sep 30, 2024
50
8
35
try to lower the power to 80% and -100MHz of VRAM clock via MSI afterburner. and limit FPS to 60fps. may the GPU is the problem of not running stable
 

Shay Green

Reputable
Feb 17, 2020
202
17
4,615
Hello,

One and a half years ago I purchased a used ASUS TUF 3080 10GB. Its been worked well. Two days ago I started crashing in Witcher 3. after about 30-50min of playtime I though it might be due to some memory leak within the game as it was the only game that I was crashing in. After few more crashes I went to the Event Viewer and noticed that Nvidia driver is causing the crash.

The description for Event ID 153 from source nvlddmkm cannot be found. Either the component that raises this event is not installed on your local computer or the installation is corrupted. You can install or repair the component on the local computer.

If the event originated on another computer, the display information had to be saved with the event.

The following information was included with the event:

\Device\Video3
Error occurred on GPUID: 800

Does anyone know what exactly is GPUID 800 or event ID 153?

I DDU my drivers and installed the latest ones, but I was still crashing, now in other games. I ran FurMark, Superposition and 3DMark stress test to try to replicate this behavior, but everything ran without issues. However if I got into more intensive game, I would crash - sometimes after 10 min, sometimes after 3 hours. No pattern whatsoever. I tried every potential fix. I decided to underclock my GPU to 1670Mhz Core Clock. So far, I haven't crashed yet, time will tell if helps. It seems that my GPU core is unstable and unable to work reliably on the factory clocks (not sure why the stress tests are not crashing it) I'm loosing about 15% of performance (Based on Superposition benchmark) with my underclock.

I filtered all errors from event logs for this year and it turns out I have been experiencing this as far as logs go, I just never thought of looking into them. Turns out every crash I had within a game was caused by this error. Is this behavior a sign that my GPU is giving out? Is there anything I can test/try?

Appreciate any help!
What PSU do you have? If it has been caused as long as logs go it could be the cause of a poor power delivery from your PSU