ogmzergrush
LOL
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2004
- Messages
- 2,198
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2002
Hi everyone, this issue is driving me absolutely mental, but I'll post here in the hope that someone has some ideas.
So, basically my problem is that I've carried out a bunch of upgrades (See specs for current system configuration), and now games refuse to run in a stable fashion. This refers to games like World of Warcraft, Quake 4, F.E.A.R., Serious Sam 2, and older games like Hitman 2, etc. Pretty much everything I've played so far seems to bring up these issues. These manifest themselves typically in the form of the machine hanging, the current sounds looping and the system being completely unresponsive (Requiring me to turn the power off at the wall to reboot). These are "randomly" timed, and will sometimes occur straight away upon loading a game, and at other times will not happen at all. As you can imagine, this makes it pretty hard to really get too into any games. The system was quite stable prior to the addition of this hardware (RAM and video card), though I formatted at the same time so it is difficult to determine exactly what the issue is.
Now, the specs:
AMD Athlon 3200
1024mb DDR400 Corsair (New) (1 stick, replaced 512 stick)
Gigabyte GA-7N400
Leadtek Winfast 6600GT (AGP) (New) (Again, replaced previous AGP card)
400W power supply
I imagine that's all that's relevant in terms of hardware. I am running a fresh install of windows XP Pro, which is fully updated. In addition to this, all mainboard drivers, etc are up to date, and the problem manifests itself using both the latest Omega drivers as well as the latest official drivers from Nvidia for the graphics card. I have indicated the items which have been recently upgraded.
Things I have tried:
* Formatted system, completely reinstalled from ground-up, issue remains.
* Varied drivers, as listed above using latest Omega and Nvidia releases.
* Suspecting faulty ram, run memory tests for eight hours straight with 0 reported errors.
* System temperature was something I considered. I have opened the system, cleaned everything, adjusted fans, etc. I have also applied a room fan blowing into the tower, meaning that the CPU temperature maxed out somewhere around 55, and the graphics card did not exceed 60 degrees celsius. To me, these seem to be well within the acceptable margins so I am reasonably confident that the issue is not caused by heating.
* I wondered whether the power supply was struggling to power all devices. In order to test this I have disconnected two cd drives within the system, as well as improving fan efficiency (Meaning that I am running two less fans within the case now, with no change in temperature). This means that the 400w power supply is running:
- Mainboard
- Graphics card (Attached to power supply using an unshared power connector, with no difference to crashes)
- Network card
- One hard drive
- 2 case fans, CPU fan
Again, to me it seems quite reasonable to assume that a 400w power supply is adequate for this fairly light setup. Of course, I have also checked all connections within the case.
* Spyware & virus scanning, registry cleaning, defragmenting, etc has been undertaken with no resolution to the issue.
* I have *significantly* underclocked the system (Reducing it from it's default settings, nothing here has been overclocked at any stage) with no resulting improvements in stability. I have also tried with bios fail-safe settings, again no difference in stability.
Hopefully I haven't left out any critical information. I'm trying to deal with this issue in a methodical manner, and it's driving me insane. Thanks in advance if anyone can help out. I've been doing research around the place and the issue seems to be widely reported, though the solutions tend to vary.
I have read about modifications to PCI latency, or turning the system to AGP 4x rather than AGP 8x rectifying this problem, though I am hesitant to try the former as I have read that it voids my warranty, and am reluctant to try the latter as I am not convinced that I should have to reduce the system's performance from standard levels to attain stability with these components. Bearing this in mind, I'd be over the moon if anyone could think of anything which did not negate my warranty, and did not resolve the situation by hobbling the hardware.
So, basically my problem is that I've carried out a bunch of upgrades (See specs for current system configuration), and now games refuse to run in a stable fashion. This refers to games like World of Warcraft, Quake 4, F.E.A.R., Serious Sam 2, and older games like Hitman 2, etc. Pretty much everything I've played so far seems to bring up these issues. These manifest themselves typically in the form of the machine hanging, the current sounds looping and the system being completely unresponsive (Requiring me to turn the power off at the wall to reboot). These are "randomly" timed, and will sometimes occur straight away upon loading a game, and at other times will not happen at all. As you can imagine, this makes it pretty hard to really get too into any games. The system was quite stable prior to the addition of this hardware (RAM and video card), though I formatted at the same time so it is difficult to determine exactly what the issue is.
Now, the specs:
AMD Athlon 3200
1024mb DDR400 Corsair (New) (1 stick, replaced 512 stick)
Gigabyte GA-7N400
Leadtek Winfast 6600GT (AGP) (New) (Again, replaced previous AGP card)
400W power supply
I imagine that's all that's relevant in terms of hardware. I am running a fresh install of windows XP Pro, which is fully updated. In addition to this, all mainboard drivers, etc are up to date, and the problem manifests itself using both the latest Omega drivers as well as the latest official drivers from Nvidia for the graphics card. I have indicated the items which have been recently upgraded.
Things I have tried:
* Formatted system, completely reinstalled from ground-up, issue remains.
* Varied drivers, as listed above using latest Omega and Nvidia releases.
* Suspecting faulty ram, run memory tests for eight hours straight with 0 reported errors.
* System temperature was something I considered. I have opened the system, cleaned everything, adjusted fans, etc. I have also applied a room fan blowing into the tower, meaning that the CPU temperature maxed out somewhere around 55, and the graphics card did not exceed 60 degrees celsius. To me, these seem to be well within the acceptable margins so I am reasonably confident that the issue is not caused by heating.
* I wondered whether the power supply was struggling to power all devices. In order to test this I have disconnected two cd drives within the system, as well as improving fan efficiency (Meaning that I am running two less fans within the case now, with no change in temperature). This means that the 400w power supply is running:
- Mainboard
- Graphics card (Attached to power supply using an unshared power connector, with no difference to crashes)
- Network card
- One hard drive
- 2 case fans, CPU fan
Again, to me it seems quite reasonable to assume that a 400w power supply is adequate for this fairly light setup. Of course, I have also checked all connections within the case.
* Spyware & virus scanning, registry cleaning, defragmenting, etc has been undertaken with no resolution to the issue.
* I have *significantly* underclocked the system (Reducing it from it's default settings, nothing here has been overclocked at any stage) with no resulting improvements in stability. I have also tried with bios fail-safe settings, again no difference in stability.
Hopefully I haven't left out any critical information. I'm trying to deal with this issue in a methodical manner, and it's driving me insane. Thanks in advance if anyone can help out. I've been doing research around the place and the issue seems to be widely reported, though the solutions tend to vary.
I have read about modifications to PCI latency, or turning the system to AGP 4x rather than AGP 8x rectifying this problem, though I am hesitant to try the former as I have read that it voids my warranty, and am reluctant to try the latter as I am not convinced that I should have to reduce the system's performance from standard levels to attain stability with these components. Bearing this in mind, I'd be over the moon if anyone could think of anything which did not negate my warranty, and did not resolve the situation by hobbling the hardware.