• Competitor rules

    Please remember that any mention of competitors, hinting at competitors or offering to provide details of competitors will result in an account suspension. The full rules can be found under the 'Terms and Rules' link in the bottom right corner of your screen. Just don't mention competitors in any way, shape or form and you'll be OK.

About to toss my brand new GEForce 1060. Please help!

Associate
Joined
6 Mar 2018
Posts
30
Location
Edinburgh
I've replaced the stock GPU and PSU on my desktop PC because gameplay was very slow. I uninstalled all GPU drivers using DDU and installed the NVIDIA driver from the website. But even with the new GPU & PSU I'm struggling to get even 10 FPS. I was getting close to that before I spent all this money. So any help you guys can give me, I'd be very grateful. I've spent days searching online for answers but drawn a blank.

I've run Furmark and Heaven 4 stress tests and both show CPU running at 50-70% and GPU maxing out at 100%. Even with games set with graphics at low, or even very low, double digit FPS is a struggle.

Windows 10, 64-bit.
AMD A10-7800 Radeon R7, 12 Compute Cores 4C+8G
12gb RAM
Silverstone STRIDER SFX 600W FULLY MODULAR '80 PLUS GOLD' POWER SUPPLY (SST-SX600-G)

GeForce GTX 1060 6GB - Driver Ver. 23.21.13.9065
 
Sorry. That's new to me.
Since you have an APU there will be a setting in the BIOS for the graphics setting.
I dont know the specifics but generaly there will be an "auto" setting among others.
"auto" tells the system to work out what card to use. By adding in a dedicated card it should just default to the dedicated card.

You can use this bios setting to disable the on board graphics completely, but you shouldnt need to do this.

I assume from the fact that you have installed the NVIDIA drivers that there were no errors/warnings and the fans are spinning on the new card.
 
I've replaced the stock GPU and PSU on my desktop PC because gameplay was very slow. I uninstalled all GPU drivers using DDU and installed the NVIDIA driver from the website. But even with the new GPU & PSU I'm struggling to get even 10 FPS. I was getting close to that before I spent all this money. So any help you guys can give me, I'd be very grateful. I've spent days searching online for answers but drawn a blank.

I've run Furmark and Heaven 4 stress tests and both show CPU running at 50-70% and GPU maxing out at 100%. Even with games set with graphics at low, or even very low, double digit FPS is a struggle.

Windows 10, 64-bit.
AMD A10-7800 Radeon R7, 12 Compute Cores 4C+8G
12gb RAM
Silverstone STRIDER SFX 600W FULLY MODULAR '80 PLUS GOLD' POWER SUPPLY (SST-SX600-G)

GeForce GTX 1060 6GB - Driver Ver. 23.21.13.9065


Post your Heaven 4 score using the settings found in this thread.

https://forums.overclockers.co.uk/threads/unigine-heaven-4-benchmark.18487976/

Mode = 1920*1080 8*AA Fullscreen

Preset = Custom

Quality = Ultra

Tessellation = Extreme
 
Thanks. never thought of that. I'll ry it right now.

Checked the BIOS and changed video from auto to PEG and while I was in there, changed the frame buffer rate from auto to the highest setting. Just ran the same stress test again and got the same results. GPU 100%, CPU 70%, Avg FPS 11.

Can anyone offer any other reason for this, other than the one I'm hoping is not the case.
 
Are all the required power connectors from the PSU plugged into the card?

Use GPU-Z to see if the Bus Interface shows PCIe x 16 3.0 @ x 16 3.0 when the card is stressed. It could be 2.0 instead of 3.0 depending on motherboard but should at least be x16.
 
Since you have an APU there will be a setting in the BIOS for the graphics setting.
I dont know the specifics but generaly there will be an "auto" setting among others.
"auto" tells the system to work out what card to use. By adding in a dedicated card it should just default to the dedicated card.

You can use this bios setting to disable the on board graphics completely, but you shouldnt need to do this.

I assume from the fact that you have installed the NVIDIA drivers that there were no errors/warnings and the fans are spinning on the new card.

The Nvidia drivers were a clean install after using DDU to remove all remnants of previous drivers. The fans both kick in properly during gameplay or stress tests. I'm completely lost.
 
Are all the required power connectors from the PSU plugged into the card?

Use GPU-Z to see if the Bus Interface shows PCIe x 16 3.0 @ x 16 3.0 when the card is stressed. It could be 2.0 instead of 3.0 depending on motherboard but should at least be x16.

GPU-Z Bus Interface showed PCIe x 16 3.0 @ x 16 2.0 during it's stress test. Is that OK?
 
GPU-Z Bus Interface showed PCIe x 16 3.0 @ x 16 2.0 during it's stress test. Is that OK?

I don't think that is ok. Re-seat the card, several times if needed. Each time, try to play with the angle of entry a bit, i.e. let it droop a bit, keep it level, keep it a bit higher. Without forcing anything of course, just very small changes.

Running at 2.0 when it's supposed to be 3.0 could indicate a seating problem of some sort. 2.0 shouldn't be that much slower than 3.0. However, the discrepancy might be a clue that more than one bit isn't making proper contact.

Anyway, I've run into that issue a couple of times and re-seating several times fixed it, so worth exploring. It wasn't just how GPU-Z was reading it, I noticed it in gameplay etc, although not as extreme as in your case. Check for dust in the slot as well.

P.S. Which motherboard is it and do you have any other device plugged into another PCIe slot?

P.P.S. See if there is a more recent BIOS version for your motherboard, and if so, flash it.
 
I don't think that is ok. Re-seat the card, several times if needed. Each time, try to play with the angle of entry a bit, i.e. let it droop a bit, keep it level, keep it a bit higher. Without forcing anything of course, just very small changes.

Running at 2.0 when it's supposed to be 3.0 could indicate a seating problem of some sort. 2.0 shouldn't be that much slower than 3.0. However, the discrepancy might be a clue that more than one bit isn't making proper contact.

Anyway, I've run into that issue a couple of times and re-seating several times fixed it, so worth exploring. It wasn't just how GPU-Z was reading it, I noticed it in gameplay etc, although not as extreme as in your case. Check for dust in the slot as well.

P.S. Which motherboard is it and do you have any other device plugged into another PCIe slot?

P.P.S. See if there is a more recent BIOS version for your motherboard, and if so, flash it.
 
Back
Top Bottom