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Malice 11.12.21 01:19 am

The system unit restarts during games

block
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SАLEM 11.12.21

Reboot occurs due to overheating of the processor or video card. For example, I can say with 90% confidence that this is "it" when the computer regularly turns off during the game. sistemnik, this will reduce the temperature of vidyuhi degrees by 5-10 ...

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Darrius 11.12.21

Have you looked in the magazine? In the task manager, no process is consuming percent? And look in the magazine if it is included. Usually the overheating protection system does this, although not a fact.

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Kryogen 11.12.21

Was the same crap, changed bp, pay attention to it.

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SАLEM 11.12.21

Malice No
overheating, MSI Afterburner and AIDA64 Business show a maximum of 60 on video and 45 on process. Are you saying that after 8 hours of playing you have such a temperature .. ???

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Givemethedust 11.12.21

Malice
Then it would be cut down, and not restart would be,
how do you know? Most likely the block is just dumb. For overheating would drop the frequencies of the card or processor. And then power surges and reboot.

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Givemethedust 11.12.21

Malice
bp does not overheat the campaign, namely the power jumps.

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Givemethedust 11.12.21

Malice
in AID, it seems, you can see what kind of voltage and voltage the power supply is giving out along the lines. But you have to wait for normal specialists who will tell you exactly what and how. Or google how to check the power supply. There will be useful topics

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pochtipushkin 11.12.21

Does the reboot happen outright, or does the blue screen crash for at least a short period of time?
If the blue screen is 99% of cases, RAM is "pissing".

I also do not believe in a maximum of 60 degrees on a video card (especially in a closed case, especially for a 970 oven). Of course, if we are not talking about non-demanding games. Although, in any case, this is hardly a matter of the video card.

To begin with, I advise you:

1) Open the case
2) Clean it from dust
3) Try for at least a few days (taking into account intensive use) to play without one wall of the case. At the same time, no matter how trite it sounds, the case should stand in a spacious place (and not in the compartment of the computer desk, where there is a distance of 2 centimeters between the case wall and the table wall). Most computer desks are designed for office buckets.
4) Test memory, say, in "MemTest" (just in case).

In any case, I am almost 100% sure that your problem is related to overheating, especially since, as I understand it, reboots occur during the game (when the main components of the system are loaded). So experiment with increasing airflow first.

PS The peculiarity of your case is the location of the power supply unit in its lower part. See if there is a gap between the grill in the lower part of the case (the grill through which air enters the PSU) and the surface on which the system unit stands, if there is any dust or other debris there.

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SАLEM 11.12.21

Malice
In addition to the processor, bridges can be very hot, and Windows without hesitation goes into reboot ...

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Darrius 11.12.21

Check the log, applications and system. Find the event leading to the reboot by time. It is not always recorded, but in most cases it is possible to understand what caused the reboot.

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saa0891 11.12.21

I advise you to take the computer for testing, if this is a power supply unit, then you can easily burn something, especially if the computer is only five months old and there is a guarantee.

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pochtipushkin 11.12.21

Malice

And how to check it, without changing the power supply ?

If you have the skills to handle the tester, then manually. If there are no skills, remove the PSU and take it to specialists. At the same time, there is absolutely no need to lead the entire system unit somewhere.

But about 5 fans. ... ... When I first read your post and a description of the detailed problem and the system unit, I immediately drew attention to the power of the power supply unit (650 watts), it seemed to me small, there was some fleeting thought.

Now, for some reason, I am inclined precisely to the fact that your power supply unit does not pull out a sufficiently powerful processor and video card, as well as 5 more! additional coolers. It seems to me that such a number of coolers is an absolute overkill. You still do not have 4 titanium in the case =)

Try turning off 3 coolers, leaving only the front on the case and the back. Remove the side cover (of course, the one that provides access to the filling =). And also check all the same air access to the power supply unit at the bottom of the system unit. And, most likely, the reboots will stop.

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pochtipushkin 11.12.21

Malice Is that

why you ask for help or advice, if you answer every advice / help with your denial and don't even try to try? Such problems are solved by trial. So try it rather than trying to challenge every piece of advice. If everything pulls out for you, there are no viruses, everything works as it should, then there should be no problem. Why then was this topic created? It seems that you yourself diagnosed that everything is fine, and now you are trying to force us to prove that this is not so, reassuring and denying all our guesses.

Thank you for your attention. Happy to help.

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myasper 11.12.21

If it comes in handy, my PSU also threw the system unit into a reboot, however, even out of the blue. I think it makes no sense to test the operative, if it is killed, it goes into a blue screen. And about the power supply unit - Zalman and Thermaltake covered themselves at one time, until they bought ETG 850 W. Well, that is. I am not advertising, but hinting to leave brands for good China.

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pochtipushkin 11.12.21

myasper
Waiting for an answer "it's not about the power supply, everything worked fine before" =)))

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MunchkiN 616 11.12.21

more like a
power supply, but not necessarily because when the power supply is not pulled out, a shutdown should take place if the reboot takes place simply without any blue screens - most likely there is still a problem with the power supply of something and not necessarily a power supply. there can be a lot of things.
if even for half a second the blue screen artifacts and stuttering is a problem both from the software part and from the memory side, for example.

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myasper 11.12.21

pochtipushkin This is
normal. He wants to hear about a secret button or a magic finger snap. It is quite possible that the whole situation will be clarified by a banal overflow of connectors. But this is dust, static and an outrage on the perfect assembly))

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MadaraD 11.12.21

This is a motherboard, I have the same mother and system, the system is stupidly rebooted at intervals from 1 minute to 5 days. A random reboot in the log also says that there is a lack of power in all the cores. I solved the problem by replacing the motherboard. Take it to the guarantee. And bp at cha is still not very good for this system.

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myasper 11.12.21

And, by the way, about my mother, such a problem also existed when a microcrack appeared in the area of ​​the conduits during assembly. It didn’t affect right away, until there were continuous rebuts after 7-8 months of active use.
toMadaraD, thanks for reminding)

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pochtipushkin 11.12.21

myasper
About that and conversation, you need to try, poke around , use all possible options.