- Joined
- Jul 11, 2023
- Messages
- 145 (0.28/day)
Processor | Ryzen 7 5800X3D |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus Strix B550-A |
Cooling | Be Quiet! Dark Rock 4 |
Memory | Gskill Trident Z DDR4-3200 (16GB x 2) |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire Pulse RX 7900 XT 20GB |
Storage | Samsung 970 Evo Plus NVME 1TB (Boot), Samsung 970 Evo Plus NVME 2TB, Samsung QVO Sata 2Tb |
Display(s) | Aoc 31.5" 1440p 75hz; Asus 24" 1080p 75hz (secondary) |
Case | Be Quiet! Silent Base 802 White |
Power Supply | Corsair RM750X 2021 w/ Corsair Type 4 Sleeved Red Cables |
At this point I'm at my wit's end trying to fix the fact that LatencyMon constantly flags problems as soon as I run any games.
The games themselves work totally fine and perform great, although RDR2 has the odd pop in some of the audio sound effects, but to be honest I'm starting to hear that the game is known for that issue with a lot of people so IDK if that has anything to do with it.
I have seen it suggested on another forum that part of my problem might be the fact that back in 2020 I bought a microsoft store version of Windows 10 Home, and last year accepted the upgrade to Windows 11. A few weeks ago I ran the in-built factory reset function including wiping all my files, but this was done internally, without an external flash drive for the boot media. It's been suggested that me doing the reinstall this way may have allowed any corruption from the upgrade process to persist into my new OS install.
What I was recommended to do was reinstall W11 from external USB boot media (which I'm more than capable of doing), but to do it strictly in offline mode, and to download "all drivers relevant to my system" prior, installing them via admin command prompt before even connecting to the internet and letting Windows do the rest.
This isn't something I've ever done, nor do I know how to do it.
For instance:
1. I don't know how to even do the installation offline, because I'm going to be asked for my MS login anyway
2. Having the "relevant drivers" installed prior means I'm going to have to grab another USB drive separate to the one I use for the boot media, which brings me to my third point:
3. I don't know what "all relevant drivers to my system" actually encompasses. Obviously I'm going to want to have GPU drivers ready, and maybe chipset driver package from AMD as well, but I don't know which other drivers are relevant and need installing prior to connecting to the internet.
The way I always did things (except for most recently) was installing windows from a boot media, in Online mode, and simply installing GPU and chipset drivers manually from AMD's installers found on their website once the OS itself had got up and running.
For reference, this is my latest LatencyMon result after running RDR2 for about 5 minutes. Everyone else seems to have it much, much lower once they fix everything up. And this is with most of the fixes I've seen listed on forums etc. (disabling core parking, disabling fTPM, unlocking the extra power management options and setting everything to 100%, turning off XPM / DOCP, those kind of things. If it's on a "reduce system latency" list, there's a good chance I've already tried it).
Or, should I just find some way to downgrade back to Windows 10?
The games themselves work totally fine and perform great, although RDR2 has the odd pop in some of the audio sound effects, but to be honest I'm starting to hear that the game is known for that issue with a lot of people so IDK if that has anything to do with it.
I have seen it suggested on another forum that part of my problem might be the fact that back in 2020 I bought a microsoft store version of Windows 10 Home, and last year accepted the upgrade to Windows 11. A few weeks ago I ran the in-built factory reset function including wiping all my files, but this was done internally, without an external flash drive for the boot media. It's been suggested that me doing the reinstall this way may have allowed any corruption from the upgrade process to persist into my new OS install.
What I was recommended to do was reinstall W11 from external USB boot media (which I'm more than capable of doing), but to do it strictly in offline mode, and to download "all drivers relevant to my system" prior, installing them via admin command prompt before even connecting to the internet and letting Windows do the rest.
This isn't something I've ever done, nor do I know how to do it.
For instance:
1. I don't know how to even do the installation offline, because I'm going to be asked for my MS login anyway
2. Having the "relevant drivers" installed prior means I'm going to have to grab another USB drive separate to the one I use for the boot media, which brings me to my third point:
3. I don't know what "all relevant drivers to my system" actually encompasses. Obviously I'm going to want to have GPU drivers ready, and maybe chipset driver package from AMD as well, but I don't know which other drivers are relevant and need installing prior to connecting to the internet.
The way I always did things (except for most recently) was installing windows from a boot media, in Online mode, and simply installing GPU and chipset drivers manually from AMD's installers found on their website once the OS itself had got up and running.
For reference, this is my latest LatencyMon result after running RDR2 for about 5 minutes. Everyone else seems to have it much, much lower once they fix everything up. And this is with most of the fixes I've seen listed on forums etc. (disabling core parking, disabling fTPM, unlocking the extra power management options and setting everything to 100%, turning off XPM / DOCP, those kind of things. If it's on a "reduce system latency" list, there's a good chance I've already tried it).
Or, should I just find some way to downgrade back to Windows 10?