When the screen gets filled with flying debris, my FPS would dive from 80 down to 30, which is a wild ride but incredibly frustrating. The AK500's default fan profile just can't handle sustained loads like this, with temps hitting 88°C - 92°C and triggering heavy clock fluctuations. I tried 'Power Saver' mode in BIOS, but while it saved 4°C, the physics simulations slowed down to a crawl—totally unacceptable. I went into the motherboard control center, set the fans to hit 100% at 65°C, and swapped to a high-performance thermal paste. AIDA64 confirmed peak temps dropped from 92°C to 68°C - 74°C, and the frame drops vanished. I did have an issue where the fans kept ramping up and down rapidly between 60°C - 65°C, so I added a 5-degree hysteresis window to stop the noise. Fans now sit at 1500 RPM, and frame times are rock steady at 5.1ms - 6.4ms. Last updated onApril 12, 2026 2:02 PM.
Is thread priority the issue when my Onda 9D4-DVH stutters in crowded GTA V RP city fights?
AI FiltersJoining an RP server with a hundred players is a blast, but the sudden frame drops were absolutely killing the vibe. The default scheduling on the Onda 9D4-DVH was struggling with concurrent network requests and physics, with response times swinging wildly between 20-40ms, causing the main game thread to jump between cores constantly. I tried enabling 'Game Mode' in Windows, but that did nothing but hide some notifications—totally useless. I eventually used a process Lasso-style tool to force the game onto the performance cores and locked the minimum processor state to 100% in the power plan. In Task Manager, the core load stopped jumping around and flattened out, and the stutters vanished. The only downside was that my background apps lagged for a second until I assigned them to the efficiency cores. CPU temps are stable at 68-74℃ with fans at 1500-1700 RPM. Profiling tools show the scheduling latency is gone, and memory stays at 58-63℃. Last updated onMay 6, 2026 11:54 AM.
Right when a massive boss charges at the screen, my frames would plummet from 110 to 40, which is a total mood killer. The Fanxiang S910PRO 2TB has insane PCIe 5.0 speeds, but it runs hot—hitting 82-88℃ under load, which triggers the thermal throttle and halves the bandwidth. I tried a BIOS power-saving tweak, but while it dropped the temp by 5 degrees, the load times became unbearable. I ended up replacing the stock thermal pads with high-performance ones and disabled PCIe Link State Power Management. HWInfo showed the peak temp drop from 85℃ to 62-68℃, and the frame drops vanished. I actually had a bit of a struggle with the first pad installation—it wasn't sitting flat, and temps actually went up by 2 degrees until I tightened the screws properly. Now, sequential reads are locked at 10000MB/s. The read/write mode switch is finally confirmed in the performance panel, but this drive requires a beefy cooler to stay stable. Last updated onApril 24, 2026 8:45 AM.
Hitting a clean headshot is an amazing rush, but having the game stutter immediately after just kills the mood. The VRAM controller on the Vastarmor Radeon RX 9070 XT Super Alloy Pro was struggling with high-frequency small file reads, with response times swinging between 15-30ms. I tried enabling Windows Game Mode, but that did absolutely nothing except clean up the UI—a total waste of effort. I ended up manually setting the virtual memory to a fixed range of 32GB-64GB and locked the VRAM frequency at 2400MHz. In Task Manager, the VRAM peak stabilized at 6.5-7.2GB, and the overflow-induced stutters stopped. My boot time actually slowed down by about 5 seconds after fixing the page file, but I fixed that by cleaning up my startup apps. Temps are steady at 62-68℃ with fans at 1300-1500 RPM. The internal profiler shows the scheduling lag is gone. Last updated onMay 3, 2026 8:30 AM.
Right in the middle of a sandstorm fight, my FPS would suddenly tank from 80 down to 40, which is an absolute rollercoaster of frustration. It turns out the default profiles for the Asgard Thor DDR5 6400 have some compatibility quirks with certain boards, causing the memory controller to jump wildly between 5600MHz - 6400MHz. I tried lowering the in-game settings, but while the FPS went up, the game looked terrible, and that was a compromise I wasn't willing to make. I went into the BIOS, locked the frequency at a steady 6000MHz, and bumped the voltage from 1.35V to 1.38V for absolute stability. Monitoring with RTSS, the frame times tightened from 18-38ms to a smooth 12-16ms, and the drops disappeared. Interestingly, locking it at 6000MHz actually cost me about 2 FPS at first, until I fine-tuned the secondary timings to get the performance back. Memory temps stayed stable between 52-58℃. I verified the frequency lock in the driver panel, and temps held at 52-58℃. Last updated onApril 25, 2026 4:05 PM.