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After the suspicions raised here, I did a little research and found that, indeed, the problem is the video card. Here's the maintenance link for a 1080 with the same problem, that is, the gpu clock stuck at 139mhz:
Given the situation, it couldn't be anything else. Unfortunately I don't have a way to photograph the PCB, as I already tried to disassemble this video card a while ago, for cleaning, and I couldn't. Thank you all for the attention! Next week I will evaluate the feasibility of fixing it.
The first recommended measures had no effect. The pci-E cable is well fitted, even now at night, I switched to the other available cable, but with no effect either. The BIOS update will be due for now.
I'm sure the video card is not fake. I'm Brazilian and a friend brought it from the US in 2017, bought on amazon. I also noticed this VRAM detail in the benchmark, but I considered it a program error. According to cpu-z I still have 6gb.
All the conventional attempts to deal with video card problems have already been tried. Even though my video card is EVGA, I use MSI's Afterburner manager and there the power limit is at 100%.
That 810MHz VRAM and 139MHz GPU are just the problem. They remain that way regardless of whether the game runs or not. In both the NVIDIA control panel and Windows, the power settings are set to maximum performance. Where can I check VRAM clock speed in NVIDIA control panel?
Hi, I'm facing a very strange situation. My video card doesn't work when I play a game. Despite the GPU running at 100%, the temperature, frequency and FPS remain low. VRAM usage is also low. There is simply no difference between the graphics card being idle or running a game, other than using...