Nvidia gtx 650 ti boost sudden crash

Michael Mulyadi

Reputable
Dec 24, 2014
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0
4,510
I have a Nvidia gtx 650 ti boost, however, when i play some games at high setting ( sometimes lower settings, it keep crash, the screen after crash, sometimes black, pink, green, etc, sometimes i reset my computer and it's fine, but sometimes, nedd to shutdown the psu, and turn it on again, please tell me what happened

CPU : Intel Core2Duo E7300
Mobo : Gigabyte GA41 SP-MT(LGA775)
HDD : WDC 1GB & 250 GB
PSU : Corsair VS650
RAM : 2X4 GB
 
Solution
Download HWinfo and run sensors by checking only the "sensors" checkbox when the application starts. Take screenshots of all the sensors and post them here using tinypic or a similar image hosting site. It would be helpful to take screenshots with the system both at idle and again under load with a game or stress test running. Furmark, Heaven or Prime95 would all be fine so we can take a look at the GPU and PSU sensors.

There will be too many sensors for one screenshot so you'll need to scroll down and take a second screenshot to include all the sensors for both idle and load.

HWinfo: http://www.hwinfo.com/download.php

How to post screenshots: http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-2173703/post-images-tomshardware-guide.html


This...
Download HWinfo and run sensors by checking only the "sensors" checkbox when the application starts. Take screenshots of all the sensors and post them here using tinypic or a similar image hosting site. It would be helpful to take screenshots with the system both at idle and again under load with a game or stress test running. Furmark, Heaven or Prime95 would all be fine so we can take a look at the GPU and PSU sensors.

There will be too many sensors for one screenshot so you'll need to scroll down and take a second screenshot to include all the sensors for both idle and load.

HWinfo: http://www.hwinfo.com/download.php

How to post screenshots: http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-2173703/post-images-tomshardware-guide.html


This is likely either a faulty PSU not keeping up it's end of the deal or a faulty GPU but there are a few other possibilities. Is this a new build or was it working fine before and just began doing this recently? Have you tried cleaning the driver installation by removing all the current drivers using Display driver uninstaller and then reinstalling the most current drivers? I'd try that first, and then we can go from there.

Run the DDU, choose the Nvidia option and allow the safe mode reboot when it asks. After completion install the driver package.

Display driver uninstaller: http://www.wagnardmobile.com/DDU/

Nvidia drivers: http://www.nvidia.com/download/driverResults.aspx/80913/en-us
 
Solution

Michael Mulyadi

Reputable
Dec 24, 2014
12
0
4,510
Nah, i 'm already check it and it's just doing fine, the problem is located at the processor which is overheated and cause the gpu to shutdown, can somebody give advice what is the best cpu coolers please?
 
Your processor doesn't, and can't, ever cause your GPU to shut down. The temps of one have nothing to do with the other. That's not to say that if one of them overheats, it isn't a problem, because it is. It just doesn't work the way you described it.

If your CPU is overheating you either have a failed cooler, an incorrectly configured overclock, an incorrectly thermal paste job on the CPU cooler heat sink, a damaged CPU or poor case airflow. The most common reasons are too much dust and crap built up in the CPU cooler heatsink under the fan, a poorly done paste job or a lack of airflow through the case due to a lack of fans or fans being turned the wrong direction.

IF you need a new CPU cooler and are short on cash, I'd suggest the Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO. If cash isn't a problem, the Noctua NH-U14S.
 
I don't know. I can't tell you because you have still not followed the recommended steps above in order for me to take a look at your sensors and determine where the trouble is coming from. Please follow the steps above and include three screenshots for the system sensors under idle and three for it under load using the valley benchmark or Furmark utilities. This way we can see if voltages, temperatures or some other issue may be at play. Not every issue can be found in this way, but all of the more common ones can.