When sliding across the battlefield at high speeds, the fluidity was suddenly killed by a horizontal tear across the screen. It was actually exciting in a weird way because it pointed directly to a frequency scheduling flaw. The GDDR7 memory on the Manli Snow Fox RTX 5070 OC had a 2-4ms sync offset during high-speed switching, which knocked the render frames out of sync with my monitor. I tried turning on V-Sync, but the input lag jumped to over 40ms, making the controls feel like I was playing in mud. I used MSI Afterburner to lock the core clock at 2450MHz and disabled the auto-boost, then locked the refresh rate to 144Hz. The frame time analyzer showed the 6-15ms variance shrink to a tiny 6.8-7.2ms window, and the tearing vanished. I had a couple of driver resets when I first locked the clock, but a tiny voltage bump to 1.05V made it stable. The GPU stays at 58-64℃ with fans at 1300RPM. I verified with a frame comparison tool that the tearing is 100% gone, and fans now sit between 1400-1600RPM. Last updated onMarch 24, 2026 6:11 PM.
My PA120 V3 can't handle the spikes in Code: Jie, causing CPU throttling. Should I tweak the curve?
AI FiltersWatching my temps rocket from 50℃ to 92℃ in 30 seconds was a nightmare—the thermal pressure is insane. The default fan curve on the PA120 V3 is way too conservative; there was a 3-second lag before the fans ramped from 800 RPM to 1500 RPM, leaving my cores hovering between 95-98℃. I tried just pinning the fans to 100%, but it sounded like a jet engine taking off in my room and only dropped the temp by 2℃, which is a terrible trade-off. I went into the BIOS and rebuilt the PWM curve, setting 70℃ as the aggressive ramp-up point, and tightened the mounting brackets for better pressure. HWInfo shows my peaks are now capped at 72-78℃, and my boost clocks actually hold. I actually messed up the mounting tension the first time and one core was 5℃ hotter than the others, so I had to repaste and remount. Now the noise is around 32 dB. I can swap between silent and performance modes in the software, and temps stay at 72-78℃. Last updated onMarch 14, 2026 12:59 PM.
Just as my base hit 100 Pals, the game crashed. The sudden shift from building bliss to a desktop crash was infuriating. I dug in and found the old BIOS on my ASRock Z370M Pro4 had a 12-18ms addressing delay with high-capacity RAM, making the controller unstable at 1.2V. I tried downclocking the RAM to 2400MHz, but the load times became unbearable—totally inefficient. I finally flashed the latest BIOS and manually bumped the RAM voltage to 1.35V while enabling Gear 1 mode. Prime95 ran for 6 hours with zero errors, and latency dropped from 78ns to 65-68ns. I had a scare after the flash where my boot drive disappeared, but toggling CSM compatibility mode fixed it. Board temps are 42-48℃ and RAM is 40-45℃. It's stable now, but updating old boards is always a gamble. Last updated onMarch 16, 2026 7:02 PM.
Finally got my hands on Silksong, but the smooth 2D action had these bizarre micro-hitches during fast combat. It felt like some physical drag was killing the fluidity. Looking at the data, the DeepCool AK500 ARGB couldn't keep up when the CPU boosted to 5.1GHz, causing temps to swing violently between 72℃ - 85℃ and triggering frequency jitter. I first tried capping the max boost in software, which stopped the drops but made the game feel sluggish. I hated that compromise and decided to go for a hardcore physical fix. I stripped the cooler and meticulously adjusted the mounting pressure to be perfectly symmetrical, then swapped the paste for a high-conductivity phase-change pad. In real-world use, temps were crushed down to 62℃ - 67℃, and frame times converged from a messy 4-12ms swing to a tight 3.5ms - 4.2ms. I actually over-tightened the screws on my first attempt and slightly warped the motherboard PCB—terrifying experience—until I backed them off and tightened them in a diagonal sequence. Fans are now steady at 1100RPM - 1300RPM. Switched to 'Ultimate Performance' mode, and it's finally rock solid. Last updated onMarch 29, 2026 5:17 PM.
I'm seeing bad horizontal tearing when turning quickly in MH Wilds on my Onda 9D4-DVH; help!
AI FiltersWatching a monster sprint across the screen is awesome, but those horizontal tear lines were totally killing the vibe. The Onda 9D4-DVH defaults to only 256MB of video memory, which caused a 15-22ms sync delay when handling 4K textures. I first tried enabling V-Sync in-game, but the input lag jumped to over 60ms—it felt like I was playing in mud, so that was a hard no. I went into the BIOS under Advanced Chipset settings and bumped the pre-allocated video memory to 1GB and enabled the Fast Response mode. Checking RTSS frame time analysis, the gaps dropped from 12-28ms to a steady 8-14ms, and the tearing completely vanished. I actually messed up the first memory bump and the system stopped recognizing my GPU entirely; I had to reset to defaults and try again. Board temps are 50-56℃ and RAM is at 42-47℃. Compared screenshots prove the fluidity is back. The controls feel snappy again. Last updated onApril 5, 2026 6:36 PM.