![]() Hoping to get new drivers to try soon.Īnyone else with this issue please confirm if it's only affecting DX10/11/12 and OpenGL games but not Vulkan and DirectX9. System is new and was running games fine prior with a temporary GT1030 GPU. Have tried everything I can think of from different Windows 10 Pro 圆4 versions 20H, latest and also pre-Zen 3 BIOS for Asus B550-I motherboard, disabling 3800XT CPU core boost capping 3.9GHz clock, disabling Crucial Ballistix DDR4-3600 CL16 32GB 16GBx2 memory XMP so running memory at 2666MHz, forcing slot to PCIe 3.0, etc. Pause for 2 seconds then crash to desktop no error Disable OpenXR Start MSFS and wait for load to main screen CTRL TAB to enable VR VR works fine Log from OpenXR: OXRTK 18:30:29 -0500: OpenXR Toolkit - GA-2 (v1.2. Anyhow, just bought a new Corsair SF750 to rule out PSU. Seems like a driver issue from my experience with trying some new drivers with 5600XT GPU. I can play Vulkan Doom Eternal at 1080 Ultra Nightmare fine and see it drawing about 350W max from wall watt meter but DirectX11 Battlefield 4 crashes to desktop while drawing only about 130W so well below PSU capacity. Funny thing is Vulkan and DirectX9 games seem fine. All DirectX10/11/12 and OpenGL games crash to desktop and most of the time with DXGI_ERROR_DEVICE_HUNG. ![]() I have the same Corsair SF600 PSU and Sapphire 6800 GPU. You lose some functions, but most games will play just the same. Then use device manager to install the driver without the software and manually point it to that folder for the drivers. Then download the driver package, and run it until it ually to the C:\AMD folder. Unsintall the software and drivers, and wipe using a drivers sweeper of your choice to clean it all out. ![]() Power usage by that cpu and that gpu are not high enough to top this.if it is running perfectly, but that is usually the likely isn't pushing 600w and that is why they tend to go higher.Īs for the drivers, I would suggest doing the no software method of install. Your psu is rated to push 600w on the 12v rail alone. I am skeptical that it is a max power issue, but generally PSU's will lose some after a while. Odd sounding question but how old is your psu? If it is a few years old it may be time for an upgrade as it won't be as efficient and can't push the 600 watts on the 12v rail that it would need.
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