Re: Input Lag / Desync only on one computer
Posted: 26 Apr 2022, 11:38
Who you gonna call? The Blur Busters! For Everything Better Than 60Hz™
https://forums.blurbusters.com/
Did this also helped for apex legends by any chance?akylen wrote: ↑26 Apr 2022, 11:38https://gyazo.com/f955d2cf730cc55569c11d26f72cc14f
Didnt touched anything else
Is the one in white text default? If so, according to the image you decreased CPU Core and SA Voltage but increased IO Voltage. care to give more info on what you did? Did you also decrease DRAM voltage? just confused from the image, my bios shows info a bit differently.akylen wrote: ↑03 May 2022, 11:07Small update, it seems that I found, for the moment a compromise so that I don't have any more worries, and that seems to be a logical solution compared to the cause.
What I did was that I was in the bios, at the voltage level, I went up everything I could by +2 notches in the red by pressing the "+" key on the numeric keypad.
I mounted one by one and checked that there was no crash, if there was a crash I reset the one that caused the crash to the default and I went to the next one.
Photo of my bios configuration attached.
For me, I'm pretty sure it's a computer voltage problem, and therefore, related to the electricity at home.
By default, me what I had, CPU Core and SA Voltage were much lower than in the picture.savoid wrote: ↑03 May 2022, 12:57Is the one in white text default? If so, according to the image you decreased CPU Core and SA Voltage but increased IO Voltage. care to give more info on what you did? Did you also decrease DRAM voltage? just confused from the image, my bios shows info a bit differently.akylen wrote: ↑03 May 2022, 11:07Small update, it seems that I found, for the moment a compromise so that I don't have any more worries, and that seems to be a logical solution compared to the cause.
What I did was that I was in the bios, at the voltage level, I went up everything I could by +2 notches in the red by pressing the "+" key on the numeric keypad.
I mounted one by one and checked that there was no crash, if there was a crash I reset the one that caused the crash to the default and I went to the next one.
Photo of my bios configuration attached.
For me, I'm pretty sure it's a computer voltage problem, and therefore, related to the electricity at home.
akylen wrote: ↑03 May 2022, 14:54By default, me what I had, CPU Core and SA Voltage were much lower than in the picture.savoid wrote: ↑03 May 2022, 12:57Is the one in white text default? If so, according to the image you decreased CPU Core and SA Voltage but increased IO Voltage. care to give more info on what you did? Did you also decrease DRAM voltage? just confused from the image, my bios shows info a bit differently.akylen wrote: ↑03 May 2022, 11:07Small update, it seems that I found, for the moment a compromise so that I don't have any more worries, and that seems to be a logical solution compared to the cause.
What I did was that I was in the bios, at the voltage level, I went up everything I could by +2 notches in the red by pressing the "+" key on the numeric keypad.
I mounted one by one and checked that there was no crash, if there was a crash I reset the one that caused the crash to the default and I went to the next one.
Photo of my bios configuration attached.
For me, I'm pretty sure it's a computer voltage problem, and therefore, related to the electricity at home.
Regarding the DRAM Voltage, it was 1.35 as a base, and I increased it to 1.50, but does this change anything compared to the others, honestly, I don't know. I did this on a whim when trying things to fix the problem which is really annoying.
In red this is what i put.
Of course it's to modify at your own risk, I don't want to be responsible if you have a problem, I'm just saying what worked for me.
Akylen, I'd like to know which PSU you had with your old PC. Can't you open the side case and just look at it? You should be able to tell from there unless it's some prebuilt generic PC like Dell/Lenovo/HP that uses it's own power supply.akylen wrote: ↑03 May 2022, 14:54By default, me what I had, CPU Core and SA Voltage were much lower than in the picture.savoid wrote: ↑03 May 2022, 12:57Is the one in white text default? If so, according to the image you decreased CPU Core and SA Voltage but increased IO Voltage. care to give more info on what you did? Did you also decrease DRAM voltage? just confused from the image, my bios shows info a bit differently.akylen wrote: ↑03 May 2022, 11:07Small update, it seems that I found, for the moment a compromise so that I don't have any more worries, and that seems to be a logical solution compared to the cause.
What I did was that I was in the bios, at the voltage level, I went up everything I could by +2 notches in the red by pressing the "+" key on the numeric keypad.
I mounted one by one and checked that there was no crash, if there was a crash I reset the one that caused the crash to the default and I went to the next one.
Photo of my bios configuration attached.
For me, I'm pretty sure it's a computer voltage problem, and therefore, related to the electricity at home.
Regarding the DRAM Voltage, it was 1.35 as a base, and I increased it to 1.50, but does this change anything compared to the others, honestly, I don't know. I did this on a whim when trying things to fix the problem which is really annoying.
In red this is what i put.
Of course it's to modify at your own risk, I don't want to be responsible if you have a problem, I'm just saying what worked for me.
My observations are same as yours… most logical is that the new HW draw more power constantly compare to old HW. Power can by dirty and interfer with new HW not with the old one.akylen wrote: ↑05 Jun 2022, 16:33Well, to this day, still no explanation for why or how it does that.
The voltage theory that I explained above is only in fact a placebo.
Nevertheless there must be a correlation on why when I have the older motherboard + the older processor I have no problems, and when I put the new motherboard + the newer processor, it is unplayable.