Every time a ghost appeared, my frame rate would tank from 40 FPS to a pathetic 12 FPS. My Kingston HyperX Fury DDR3 1866 was just suffocating, with memory usage pinned at 92-98%. I tried increasing the Windows page file to 32GB first, but that just caused stuttering during asset loads—a complete waste of time. I went into the BIOS and aggressively tightened the primary timings from 10-10-10-28 down to 9-9-9-26, and pushed the voltage from 1.5V to 1.6V. Checking the frame time analysis, my 1% lows jumped from 8 FPS to 22 FPS, which made the tearing much less noticeable. I did have some random reboots at first, but loosening the tRFC by 20 units stabilized everything. RAM temps are now 52-58℃ and VRMs are around 60-65℃. I managed to squeeze out a 12% increase in read/write bandwidth. It's still an old platform, so it's not perfect, but it's a massive improvement. Last updated on2026-04-25 16:07:43。
I'm seeing weird screen flickers in the dark tunnels of Metro Awakening. Is this a virtual memory issue or something else?
Real-time MonitoringThe subtle flickering in the dark tunnels was giving me actual anxiety; it completely ruined the stealth vibe. It turns out the Jginyue B760M Gaming D4 has some aggressive power saving that caused the CPU voltage to swing between 0.8V and 1.2V, triggering render sync errors in the GPU driver. My first instinct was to switch Windows to 'High Performance' mode, but that was a disaster—CPU temps shot up to 85℃ and the fans sounded like a jet engine. I felt totally defeated. I went back into the BIOS and completely disabled C-States, then locked the minimum CPU state to 99%. Checking HWInfo, the voltage stabilized into a tight 1.15-1.22V range, and the flickering vanished instantly. The trade-off? My idle power draw went up by about 12W, and I had to manually rewrite my fan curves to stop the noise. VRM temps are now sitting at 62-68℃. It's a bit of a power hog now, but at least the image is stable. Last updated on2026-04-02 09:23:26。
I'm getting these micro-stutters while galloping across the map in Ghost of Tsushima PC. Is the Onda 9D4-DVH failing me?
Software UsageGalloping through the open fields of Tsushima was a nightmare because of these sudden, tiny hitches that completely killed the immersion. I dug into the logs and found the Onda 9D4-DVH memory controller was freaking out, with frequencies bouncing wildly between 2133MHz and 2666MHz. This caused my frame times to spike between 15ms and 30ms. I tried the 'Auto Overclock' in BIOS first, but that was a joke—it just led to a BSOD the moment a combat scene started. I had to go manual. I navigated to BIOS -> Advanced -> Memory Settings and locked the frequency at 2400MHz, then bumped the DRAM voltage from 1.2V to 1.25V. Using AIDA64, I saw the latency tighten up from a messy 88-102ns down to a steady 76-82ns. One weird thing: my boot time jumped by 3 seconds until I disabled Fast Boot in Windows. Now, my RAM sits at 42-48℃ and VRMs are around 55-62℃. After a few stress tests, the fluctuations are gone. It's rock steady now, though the manual setup was a bit of a slog. Last updated on2026-03-07 22:22:10。
My textures are disappearing or loading late in Farming Simulator 25 on my Galax B760M D4. How do I stop this lag?
TroubleshootingSeeing my crops turn into weird purple blobs was a total mood killer. After some digging, I realized the PCIe slot on my Galax B760M D4 Wi-Fi Black Knight was struggling with 'Auto' negotiation, constantly flipping between Gen 3.0 and 4.0, which caused massive data packet loss. I tried lowering the texture quality in-game, but that just made everything look like a blurry mess—not an option. I went into the BIOS -> Peripheral Configuration and forced the PCIe speed to Gen 4, then slammed the latest chipset drivers from the site. I ran GPU-Z and confirmed the link is now locked at x16 4.0 without any dipping. I did hit a snag where the system didn't recognize the GPU for a second, but a quick reseat and cleaning the gold pins with isopropyl alcohol sorted it. Board temps are hovering around 45-52℃. After two hours of driving around the map, the textures are finally loading properly. It was a frustrating fix, but the link is finally stable. Last updated on2026-03-30 16:07:55。
My Valkyrie V360 pump speed is fluctuating in The Hunt, causing CPU spikes and FPS drops. Help!
Overclocking SettingsThe pump speed on this thing was acting crazy—jumping from 2000 to 4000 RPM randomly—which caused the CPU temp to swing between 60℃ and 85℃. It was absurd. These spikes triggered the motherboard's protection, making my FPS bounce between 100 and 40. I tried setting the pump to full speed in the software, but it sounded like a power drill and the temps still fluctuated, which was just frustrating. I eventually went into the BIOS, switched the pump header from DC to PWM, and raised the minimum voltage threshold from 5V to 7V to ensure it didn't dip under low load. The monitoring panel now shows core temps stable between 62-68℃ with jumps limited to under 3℃. I did have a brief moment where the pump stopped entirely after switching to PWM, but a BIOS update fixed that. Radiator fans now stay between 1100-1300 RPM. I used a config export tool to back up these PWM curve parameters, and the cooling is finally stable. Last updated on2026-05-01 11:00:32。