High CPU Usage when mouse is in use. W10

Pukawka187

Commendable
Nov 17, 2016
20
0
1,510
Hello, first sorry for my English.

My specs:
i5 6600k 3,9ghz autooc by Asus
Asus MAXIMUS VIII HERO
MSI GeForce GTX 1070 Gaming X 8GB
G.Skill Ripjaws V DDR4 16GB 3200Mhz
Thermaltake Smart SE Modular 630W
Windows 10 Home

My problem is in title: High CPU Usage when mouse is in use. When it's appears? Just when I'm moving, BUT - when I'm moving it on deskopt - explorer.exe going high, in Google Chrome - chrome.exe going high.

I tried to set BIOS default, restore nVidia drivers with DDU, nothing changed.

What the heck?
 
Solution
When "spinning" are you able to select Windows Explorer and stop it?

First, Right click and then select "End Process" on the drop down menu.

Does your system return to normal?

Are you using multiple openings of Google Chrome? Not sure how many of those you should be seeing.....

Take both Windows Explorer and Google Chrome out of the startup process.

See if all is well. Add them back separately (only one at a time).

The idea is to see if one or the other is the source of the problem.

Ralston18

Titan
Moderator
Use Task Manager, Performance Monitor, and Resource Monitor to narrow down the high CPU usage to a particular process or service.

Could be some application being run multiple times or some conflict between running applications.

Shut down as many applications as possible. Remove them from the start menu. See if the problem ends. Then start bringing the applications back one by one. Watch if one particular application causes the problem to start again.

Determine what application is responsible for that process or service. Then uninstall and reinstall the application to see if that fixes the problem.

 

Pukawka187

Commendable
Nov 17, 2016
20
0
1,510


It looks like that: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=udAhA7x_nUY
Do you want a full screenshoot from task manager?
 

Ralston18

Titan
Moderator
Feel free to post a screenshot image from task manager.

However, before doing so take a deeper look via Task Manager, Performance Monitor, and Resource Monitor to see if you can identify some process or service using high levels of resources while the "spinning" is going on.

That/those processes and services are what we need to know about.
 

Pukawka187

Commendable
Nov 17, 2016
20
0
1,510


Some SS's: http://imgur.com/a/QTDO5
 

Ralston18

Titan
Moderator
When "spinning" are you able to select Windows Explorer and stop it?

First, Right click and then select "End Process" on the drop down menu.

Does your system return to normal?

Are you using multiple openings of Google Chrome? Not sure how many of those you should be seeing.....

Take both Windows Explorer and Google Chrome out of the startup process.

See if all is well. Add them back separately (only one at a time).

The idea is to see if one or the other is the source of the problem.
 
Solution