my amd 5450 HD

Amin_9

Commendable
Aug 29, 2016
37
0
1,540
my graphic card hd 5450 has some problem it gets overheated in seconds and stops working when i install drivers.
after i installed my driver and restarted the pc it stucked at every point and showed green dots than the whole screen becamed green and black than purple i shut it down and when i restarted my pc it did that again
i can't even do something i thankfully turn on the amd gpu overclocker and it was normal nothing was overclocked but than again the screen gone poof
need help
 
Solution
In general, I'd say that no pre-built computer(Dell/HP/Lenovo/etc) is suitable for overclocking. They simply do not include components that are made for that, it would add to the cost of the computers. The market for pre-built computers is mostly people who want the cheapest computer, and they never upgrade it, and they certainly never overclock it.

That said, if someone is really persistent and maybe a little lucky, then it might be possible to squeeze some extra performance out of such a system. I wouldn't bother though. This is one reason why people build their own systems, you control the quality of the components.

CropEditPaste

Honorable
May 13, 2016
235
0
10,760
The heatsink may be off the card itself, causing the card to overheat and shutdown. Take off the heatsink, reapply thermal paste if the old thermal paste is dried up (wipe away with tissue, leave no tissue residue) and then put on the heatsink and make sure that it is TIGHT on the card.
 

Amin_9

Commendable
Aug 29, 2016
37
0
1,540
wILL I EVER BE ABLE TO OVERCLOCK MY LENOVO THINKCENTRE m58/m58p even with software
intel extreme tuning utility say's unsupported platform asrock tweaker too
and lenovo onekey overclock needs a 32 bit win and after i installed 32bits win it did'nt work need help
 
In general, I'd say that no pre-built computer(Dell/HP/Lenovo/etc) is suitable for overclocking. They simply do not include components that are made for that, it would add to the cost of the computers. The market for pre-built computers is mostly people who want the cheapest computer, and they never upgrade it, and they certainly never overclock it.

That said, if someone is really persistent and maybe a little lucky, then it might be possible to squeeze some extra performance out of such a system. I wouldn't bother though. This is one reason why people build their own systems, you control the quality of the components.
 
Solution