[SOLVED] PC Stuttering (might be power related)

waynebouvett

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Feb 4, 2019
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So this is almost a 2 year problem and unfortunately i wasted too much money for nothing for 1st case : i bought a pc from a well known company and many of my friends bought it for 1,500 euros and had pretty good specs like i7-9700k with gtx 1080 and etx..... Then when i recived it i noticed that every game stuttered and tried everything that i could think of and researched .

Went to the company and told them about the problem and they agreed to exchanged the prebuild pc with another one of the same model. Then went home and the problem was still present so i went back to the store where i bought the pc and tested the pc there and it ran smoothly (This is where i made the mistake and wasted more money and there was no problem present in the pc).

Then i decided i want to return the model to exchange the model and add more money and buy an other prebuid pc. I went with an Psu that was 750W evga gold , 16gb ram , rtx 2080 , i5-8400,b360-h (I was well aware that the cpu would present a bottleneck but i decided that in the future that i will get an upgrade) then SAME PROBLEM........I was like.....BOI .

Well Recently in summer i upgraded everything except the gpu and Still Same problem then to be sure it is not the pc i switched the gpu and same problem still..........Ok i wondered 4 diffrent devices in the same house same problems in 4 diffrent PC'S welll in the past when i went and tested the pc and used the company's power it was SMOOTH . Could this be power related? like as in the power of my house?

Well if you could kindly give me an answer it would be very helpfull.
Thank you
 
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Solution
It's very difficult to be the power of your house since the PSU has the job of making sure the power is good enough for the system.

It could be your power if you use the system on monitors or TVs that plug into the wall,especially TVs are basing their refresh rate on the MHz of the power so a small deviation can cause problems.

If you can make a friend bring their system over you could check if their system has the same problems, or get your system to a friend and see if it has the same problems on their monitors.
It's very difficult to be the power of your house since the PSU has the job of making sure the power is good enough for the system.

It could be your power if you use the system on monitors or TVs that plug into the wall,especially TVs are basing their refresh rate on the MHz of the power so a small deviation can cause problems.

If you can make a friend bring their system over you could check if their system has the same problems, or get your system to a friend and see if it has the same problems on their monitors.
 
Solution