![]() ![]() 'Genuineintel' bugcheck code 124 causes crashes, is this a faulty cpu ( i5-13600K)? Ram Sticks: Trident Z5 RGB x 2 (32gb total) PSU: EVGA SuperNOVA 1000 GT 80 Plus 1000W Fully Modular Power Supply Processor: 13th gen Intel(r) Core (TM) i5-13600K 3.50 Ghz I could just leave it on 'prefer max performance' at all times I guess but that seems like a bandaid fix and plus it would stress the system long term. This leads me to believe the problem is with the GPU, but wanted to consult and see what people suggest here before I RMA anything. There is only one single fix that seems to solve the issue - opening the NIVIDIA control panel and setting the power settings to 'prefer max performance'. I have tried making sure drivers are up to date, unplugging and replugging in all the cords to the power supply and socket itself, monitoring the temperatures, and turning off automatic restarts on windows (I am planning on testing with a different power supply soon as well). Windows event viewer always returns the same errors when this happens: Event ID 63, Event ID 41, keyword (70368744177664),(2) and bugcheckCode 278. Everything then runs as normal after that. One other random thing to note that is probably not relevant is that when I turn the power supply itself on (not the computer) the LEDs on the fans flash for a brief moment and then turn off. I have been checking the the temperature of the graphics card and CPU regularly and they are definitely not overheating. The interesting this is that this does not happen when I am playing anything intensive, in fact it only seems to happen while I am idling, surfing the web, watching videos, calling a friend. Sometimes the audio from the computer itself is distorted/delayed when this happens. I have to manually press the power button to turn it off and then power it back on again. Sometimes this happens before I can even log in, usually it takes around 15-20 minutes, sometimes it takes 1-2 hours. The issue I am having is that my set up seems to randomly crash to a black screen. I did build it with a friend who has done it many times before so I am not too worried that I did something drastically wrong. It's strange that few people recommend Adaptive Mode.Hi all, first caveat I have never built a PC before and just did so for the first time so I am still learning about how things work, so if I say anything wrong please forgive me. The following follows from this question - which games does Nvidia Control Panel consider old? But the question arises - how exactly to find out in which old games you need to set this setting, if the difference cannot be immediately felt and seen. The Maximum Performance parameter (whether we are playing a game, watching a video, searching for information on the Internet, just being in standby/afk mode) always maintains frequencies at a high level, which means that in older games this setting can help. In this case, the Optimal setting can simply "fall asleep" without taking into account the game and think that this is a normal application that does not need to allocate resources to increase and maintain the frequency ![]() ![]() But in old games that may not load as much or as much as a processor with a video card. People who recommend it say that there is nothing terrible about it for games and it may even be better for performance.īut there are other people who claim that in new games that can maximize the load on the processor and video card, this mode may not affect anything much. Hello! Few days ago I watched a few videos and read a couple of topics where people recommend setting the Optimal parameter in Power Management mode instead of Maximum Performance. ![]()
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