~15 crash dumps for ~39min recording, enjoy...
Kouji_San
Sr. Hινε UÏкεεÏεг - EUPT DeputyThe Netherlands Join Date: 2003-05-13 Member: 16271Members, NS2 Playtester, Squad Five Blue
Sr. Hινε UÏкεεÏεг - EUPT DeputyThe Netherlands Join Date: 2003-05-13 Member: 16271Members, NS2 Playtester, Squad Five Blue
Crashdumps: https://drive.google.com/file/d/19oFNQI2qrHfaDqPwJLLAuTX-siF53Zgk/view?usp=sharing
Related video of way too many crashes too handle for recording 39 minutes of footage

KEEP CALM? CRASHING IS TRYING MY PATIENCE!
Related video of way too many crashes too handle for recording 39 minutes of footage


KEEP CALM? CRASHING IS TRYING MY PATIENCE!
Comments
I DID MY BEST!
https://drive.google.com/file/d/19Wyy_hIi1WghFYWmo-aGiK5T2sw6cs91/view?usp=sharing
I may have fixed the issue though, I had my CL9 certified DDR3-1600 set to CL8. Subnautica has yet to crash since then...
Curious. Previously were you overclocking your system? I found that when I tried various overclock profiles that it changed my RAM to undesired settings. I just don't bother with overclocking anymore.
I manually tweak everything when I overclock, I'm one of the oldschool OC guys. Started out on the Intel Pentium 66@75Mhz and 200MMX@250Mhz. I simply want full control over everything ranging from BUS frequency, voltages, memory timing etc...
I was running my CL 9-9-9-27 DDR3-1600 @ 8-8 -8-24 DDR3-1600, which is perfectly stable for folding and various OC verification programs. But ever since I changed them back to their stock timing, It seems Subnautica is no longer crashing (for now
Sidenote, not overclocking the 2500K is blasphamy