![]() ![]() You can open the OpenGl/OpenCL versions tool from the Tools menu to see the version of these technologies supported by your GPU. It will also display the OpenGL or OpenCL support for your GPU chip along with all the basic information about your system hardware like the BIOS, motherboard, CPU, installed RAM and so on. ![]() It displays the number of GPUs you have on your system, their temperatures, fan speeds, core frequencies, voltage level, power consumption, and the GPU usage. The program does not require any action on your part and it starts monitoring your GPU as soon as it is launched. The GPU Shark program is a portable Windows application that you can run without having to install anything on your Windows PC. So how would you tell what exactly is happening inside your computer’s GPU and how well it is performing? Actually, you can use the GPU Shark tool developed by the folks at Geeks3D and monitor all the activity of your GPU chip in real-time. But later on I realized that some of those games were not even using the GPU to its full, instead they were pushing the CPU to its limits. I was telling everyone about the power NVidia GPU that this PC had and how smooth the video performance was. We installed many demo games and tested these games for hours. ![]() First together and then if the problem persists, try each one separately.When I bought my first gaming PC many years ago, I invited all my friends over and showed them my new computer. I suggest you run Firestrike or Valley on each card. ![]() But it would be best to test the cards before looking into that. Oftentimes, when you get random shutdowns under load the PSU is a likely cause. If the same problem occurs with one card and not the other, you know there is something wrong with one of the cards. I was hoping for the MSI or the ASUS 970.Newegg is suppose to email me if/when they come back available. Newegg shows that Gigabyte card sold out also. I didn't want to move a potentially defective card. I know the 560 Ti's are a bit outdated and it's time to upgrade - I just want to check if they are ok as I can move them into SLI mode on two of my teenager machines (each has a build with 1x 560 Ti). I had been running the new Nvidia drivers for a week+ prior to that - so not thinking it was driver related. In ArchAge it is fine in the lowest graphic settings - turn it up at all and within 5 min my computer does a full shut down/reboot. Well that is the only game I am playing currently - but no issues with playing back video, etc. GPU temp: 43.0☌ (min:43.0☌ - max:48.0☌)Īny help/suggestions appreciated - realize I am a pretty green novice.Īre you having any issues in other games? > glcnd.exe microsoft.reader_8wekyb3d8bbwe (PID: 3336) Is this normal or did I screw something up when I put these in 2+ years ago? Should I try to update these somehow or? One card shows 2x the memory? (cards are physically identical) The GPU Shark part of that program - showed me big differences between the two cards - is this normal? Is there a way for a novice like myself to check these cards? I ran Furmark benchmark - no issues, ran fine, based on the web list of scores mine did fine (did not crash). I have two 560 Ti's in SLI - been having issues in a game (ArchAge) - trying to determine if I have a bad card or? From another post - pretty sure I am going to upgrade to a 970 - but all on backorder - meanwhile trying to solve this with the 560's. ![]()
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