Associate
Hi,
I bought an EVGA 1080ti SC2 just before Christmas to replace my aging 7950 boost crossfire setup. For a month or 2 everything was fine, but then games started crashing and the Valleys benchmark would crash to desktop after about 10 minutes.
Reinstalling Windows and running without non essential hardware changed nothing, so I sent my card back to EVGA for RMA. I paid 900 euro for an advance card which behaved in a identical way crashing after 5 -10 minutes into a benchmark/stress test. The card seems stable on a single monitor, but not with 3 monitors connected for NV Surround.
I swopped out my PSU for a Corsair TX750M and didn't notice any difference, so I swopped out the whole system. I bought a Asus Prime A, I7 8700k and 16 GB of Corsair DDR4 and guess what.... Yep - no change.
I'm now down a shed load of money and only want to play Planet Coaster with my son. Should I go the whole hog and buy a brand new PSU? or RMA both cards or something else?
Any help will be gratefully received as I've never had such an expensive carry on in twenty years of building PCs.
Thanks,
Jamie
I bought an EVGA 1080ti SC2 just before Christmas to replace my aging 7950 boost crossfire setup. For a month or 2 everything was fine, but then games started crashing and the Valleys benchmark would crash to desktop after about 10 minutes.
Reinstalling Windows and running without non essential hardware changed nothing, so I sent my card back to EVGA for RMA. I paid 900 euro for an advance card which behaved in a identical way crashing after 5 -10 minutes into a benchmark/stress test. The card seems stable on a single monitor, but not with 3 monitors connected for NV Surround.
I swopped out my PSU for a Corsair TX750M and didn't notice any difference, so I swopped out the whole system. I bought a Asus Prime A, I7 8700k and 16 GB of Corsair DDR4 and guess what.... Yep - no change.
I'm now down a shed load of money and only want to play Planet Coaster with my son. Should I go the whole hog and buy a brand new PSU? or RMA both cards or something else?
Any help will be gratefully received as I've never had such an expensive carry on in twenty years of building PCs.
Thanks,
Jamie