just make sure to backup all of your personal files, downloads, game saves, software settings, etc.i should just wipe all of my drives and fresh install of windows once i pop in the 9900k with a maximus 11 motherboard.
i do have msi after burner turned on and i also have evga precision x1If you have MSI afterburner or similar applications running while doing the benchmark, that is the reason why. Everytime I see the GPU missing, closing those programs fixes the issue.
Close them and run the benchmarki do have msi after burner turned on and i also have evga precision x1
also do you think my issue can be from playing in 1080p i just got my card second hand and it’s a big upgrade from what i was running before (r9 390 8gb) so i’m still playing on my 1080p 165hz monitor i’m planning to switch to 1440p soon.Does userbenchmark recognise the gpu now?
I’ve not seen a dying gpu just loose performance, there are usually more serious issues so I’d expect the gpu is ok.
It’s at this point I might consider a fresh install of Windows anyway to rule out a software problem.
Running 1080p on a game like Fortnite that is not very gpu demanding is always going to result in low gpu utilisation. Going to 1440p would give the gpu more work so you would see higher utilisation but you won’t see an increase in fps. Other games that are more gpu demanding will utilise the gpu more.also do you think my issue can be from playing in 1080p i just got my card second hand and it’s a big upgrade from what i was running before (r9 390 8gb) so i’m still playing on my 1080p 165hz monitor i’m planning to switch to 1440p soon.
Gpu crashed - for one reason or other - during the graphics test.i was also wondering why it didn’t “detect” the gpu i have the latest nvidia driver.
i’m going to pay attention to all the cores because i was only paying attention to what it measures as a whole. it would measure 50-60% usage as a whole i’ll check each core individuallyFrom now on, when you look at cpu usage, look at each core. Looking at cpu usage as the whole does not work very well.
I don't think Fortnite is 'easy' either, if not going in the opposite direction.
If Doom is gpu, Fortnite is cpu single core + ram, which is typical of mass multiplayer games.
There's also the expansions/updates that come with some of these live service titles, which slightly increase system requirements. Chapter 1 probably is easier to run than Chapter 3.
Gpu crashed - for one reason or other - during the graphics test.
Unstable overclock? Corrupt/broken/bad driver? Got too hot?
UPDATE: i have played fortnite and got up to 80-90% usage on some cores not all of them and i also played the newly released halo infinite and my gpu did max out to 100% usage but also paying attention to the cpu some of the cores were reaching 90-100% on the cpu but i was still getting well over 250 framesFrom now on, when you look at cpu usage, look at each core. Looking at cpu usage as the whole does not work very well.
I don't think Fortnite is 'easy' either, if not going in the opposite direction.
If Doom is gpu, Fortnite is cpu single core + ram, which is typical of mass multiplayer games.
There's also the expansions/updates that come with some of these live service titles, which slightly increase system requirements. Chapter 1 probably is easier to run than Chapter 3.
Gpu crashed - for one reason or other - during the graphics test.
Unstable overclock? Corrupt/broken/bad driver? Got too hot?
so what you’re saying is my cpu is bottle necking? and my ram never reaches max usage so that can’t be my bottle neckAll it takes is just one, and it doesn't have to be a perfect 100% to do it.
There's a single thread that has to handle all instructions from the game engine as well as inputs from you.
Even with all these multi-threaded cpus, many titles are bound by that one thread. That - ram plays a small role - determines fps.
That's what your latest update suggests.so what you’re saying is my cpu is bottle necking?
It's not to do with capacity. I suppose ram bandwidth would be more accurate. It's role is minor though.my ram never reaches max usage so that can’t be my bottle neck
weird. 3200mhz ram should be enough for ryzen tho. you think i’ll be good when i put it my 9900k and what should i do when i swap it out?That's what your latest update suggests.
It's not to do with capacity. I suppose ram bandwidth would be more accurate. It's role is minor though.
The cpu and ram work as a pair, it's not really just the cpu or its cores alone.
i’ve seen in hw monitor that my cpu is bottlenecking pretty bad i’m going to switch to 1440p by the end of the year and i’m also adding an i9 9900k with a maximus 11 mobo today so i should be good from now on right?Surprised nobody has directly said this yet but games at 1080p are more cpu dependent then they are gpu. Until you start moving up to 1440p you won't see the gpu doing most of the work. IMO your cpu for sure is bottlenecking you...Not sure how Fortnite is as I don't play it but in Cod multiplayer I get 220-240fps at 1440p with a 2080ti mind you this is with an OC'd 5900x.
can i use sysprep? will that allow me to make the change?Fiddlesticks, I dun' goofed and made this more complicated than it needed to be by bringing up the ram...
Going back to simple: The kit's running in dual channel, not single, and it's a decent speed, it's fine.
2700X isn't fast enough in single thread for the settings you want to run. One or more threads are maxing out, so it can't deliver any more.
You're going to need to completely reinstall Windows when switching from one brand to the other(AMD -> Intel, and vice versa).
Update: just installed a 9900k with a new install of windows. i am still bottle necking it fortnite which is ridiculous i know this isn’t new hardware but this stuff was top of the line 2 years ago. i am getting over 200fps on 1080p till my cpu hits 100% and brings it down to about 140fps yes this is playable but still isn’t what i would expect from high end hardware like this. do you think this issue is simply because i’m playing at 1080p at the moment?Surprised nobody has directly said this yet but games at 1080p are more cpu dependent then they are gpu. Until you start moving up to 1440p you won't see the gpu doing most of the work. IMO your cpu for sure is bottlenecking you...Not sure how Fortnite is as I don't play it but in Cod multiplayer I get 220-240fps at 1440p with a 2080ti mind you this is with an OC'd 5900x.
What is the cpu temperature and speed (GHz) when the drop to 140fps happens?Update: just installed a 9900k with a new install of windows. i am still bottle necking it fortnite which is ridiculous i know this isn’t new hardware but this stuff was top of the line 2 years ago. i am getting over 200fps on 1080p till my cpu hits 100% and brings it down to about 140fps yes this is playable but still isn’t what i would expect from high end hardware like this. do you think this issue is simply because i’m playing at 1080p at the moment?
well it did not use 100% of my gpu but it used 100% on a couple of cores on the cpu. temperatures were around 60c on the cpu and 50-60c on the gpu.What is the cpu temperature and speed (GHz) when the drop to 140fps happens?
I would not expect Fortnite to use 100% of a 2080Ti. It is not a gpu demanding game and with any reasonably powerful gpu with be fps limited mainly by the cpu/RAM.
That cpu/gpu usage seems about right. I’d expect the cpu to be the limiting factor. Monitor the cpu speed (GHz) while if game, if the cpu throttles (lowers GHz) when the fps drops that would be something to look into.well it did not use 100% of my gpu but it used 100% on a couple of cores on the cpu. temperatures were around 60c on the cpu and 50-60c on the gpu.
the 9900k is still reaching 90-100% on games like call of duty war zone even though i’m getting 170ish frames. think it’s because of 1080pThat cpu/gpu usage seems about right. I’d expect the cpu to be the limiting factor. Monitor the cpu speed (GHz) while if game, if the cpu throttles (lowers GHz) when the fps drops that would be something to look into.
Now you have the 9900k setup can you run userbenchmark and share the public link to the results.