- Joined
- Dec 5, 2006
- Messages
- 7,704 (1.17/day)
System Name | Back to Blue |
---|---|
Processor | i9 14900k |
Motherboard | Asrock Z790 Nova |
Cooling | Corsair H150i Elite |
Memory | 64GB Corsair Dominator DDR5-6400 @ 6600 |
Video Card(s) | EVGA RTX 3090 Ultra FTW3 |
Storage | 4TB WD 850x NVME, 4TB WD Black, 10TB Seagate Barracuda Pro |
Display(s) | 1x Samsung Odyssey G7 Neo and 1x Dell u2518d |
Case | Lian Li o11 DXL w/custom vented front panel |
Audio Device(s) | Focusrite Saffire PRO 14 -> DBX DriveRack PA+ -> Mackie MR8 and MR10 / Senn PX38X -> SB AE-5 Plus |
Power Supply | Corsair RM1000i |
Mouse | Logitech G502x |
Keyboard | Corsair K95 Platinum |
Software | Windows 11 x64 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | 31k multicore Cinebench - CPU limited 125w |
If it crashes at 850 in Crysis, that just means it's not 100% stable. It doesn't matter how many other games work fine at those clocks. If lowering the clocks give stability in any situation, you have an unstable OC.
Well, that would be my initial thoughts too, but this is a "driver crash", and again only with the "9.2 drivers", with the "9.1 drivers" everything is perfectly fine. Also Crysis is the only program it has issues with, including numerous stress tests, benchmarks and other games for extended periods of time.
Now ruling out that it is not a perfectly stable clock, but it doesn't seem to fit all in properly. No artifacts, no excessive heat, every other piece of software runs perfectly well.