I have a 6600K OCd to 4.5 Ghz, so less than OPs. I'm still using a GTX 760 and get reasonable 3d performance at 1080p for many games (some candy turned off) - of course games like Witcher 3 and Tomb Raider are a bit of GPU strain.
So I wonder with the OPs setup - How much RAM and what bios settings/speed? What type of HDD and what kind of speed?
You could run a test somewhere like here:
http://www.userbenchmark.com/
and see how your components rate against others of their ilk? Perhaps something is set up wrong with the RAM or HDD?
I have a 6600K OCd to 4.5 Ghz, so less than OPs. I'm still using a GTX 760 and get reasonable 3d performance at 1080p for many games (some candy turned off) - of course games like Witcher 3 and Tomb Raider are a bit of GPU strain.
So I wonder with the OPs setup - How much RAM and what bios settings/speed? What type of HDD and what kind of speed?
[quote="ummester"]I have a 6600K OCd to 4.5 Ghz, so less than OPs. I'm still using a GTX 760 and get reasonable 3d performance at 1080p for many games (some candy turned off) - of course games like Witcher 3 and Tomb Raider are a bit of GPU strain.
So I wonder with the OPs setup - How much RAM and what bios settings/speed? What type of HDD and what kind of speed?
You could run a test somewhere like here:
http://www.userbenchmark.com/
and see how your components rate against others of their ilk? Perhaps something is set up wrong with the RAM or HDD?
[/quote]
nah its not that, I get outstanding on the scores for that test on every component, I have 16GB of new ram just installed. I just think my expectations are too high, I want 60fps all the time with a single card and maybe that just isnt possible with these power hungry games like Fallout 4, although i was surprised Mankind Divided performed so badly as well. the only recent game I tried that was near flawless was Alien Isolation. I might try Doom 3 out due to the enclosed level design. Thanks for the input, I dony want to seem negative about 3D vision but it cant be denied that to get this great effect it is harder work than it should be :-(
Just to add. in Fallout 4 my processor is pretty much maxed out so think thats the bottleneck, the GPU uses around 70% to 80% in most areas, although at times the GPU maxes out, but not as much as the CPU. So guess in this game the 1080 ti wouldn't do much...
ummester said:I have a 6600K OCd to 4.5 Ghz, so less than OPs. I'm still using a GTX 760 and get reasonable 3d performance at 1080p for many games (some candy turned off) - of course games like Witcher 3 and Tomb Raider are a bit of GPU strain.
So I wonder with the OPs setup - How much RAM and what bios settings/speed? What type of HDD and what kind of speed?
and see how your components rate against others of their ilk? Perhaps something is set up wrong with the RAM or HDD?
nah its not that, I get outstanding on the scores for that test on every component, I have 16GB of new ram just installed. I just think my expectations are too high, I want 60fps all the time with a single card and maybe that just isnt possible with these power hungry games like Fallout 4, although i was surprised Mankind Divided performed so badly as well. the only recent game I tried that was near flawless was Alien Isolation. I might try Doom 3 out due to the enclosed level design. Thanks for the input, I dony want to seem negative about 3D vision but it cant be denied that to get this great effect it is harder work than it should be :-(
Just to add. in Fallout 4 my processor is pretty much maxed out so think thats the bottleneck, the GPU uses around 70% to 80% in most areas, although at times the GPU maxes out, but not as much as the CPU. So guess in this game the 1080 ti wouldn't do much...
Windows 7
Intel i5 6600k overclocked to 4.5GHZ
RAM - 16GB
GPU - Evga GTX 1080
Screen - Benq w1070 Projector 1280×720 res (edid override)
[quote="mrorange55"]The stutter in the games you mentionned do not exactly have sth to do with your GPU alone.[/quote]
There are quite a few things that can play into stuttering.
FFS, there was that whole thing with the X-Box controller plugged in, just to mention one. Not a problem for everyone, but a PITA for those that experienced it.
Stuttering sucks balls.....and can be e real bitch, unless Google or YouTube saves the day and offers a solution.
But anyways, you might look into the guide by helifax to disable processes prior to launching the game, "as a great place to start"
It helped with some of the games he was having some issues with.
mrorange55 said:The stutter in the games you mentionned do not exactly have sth to do with your GPU alone.
There are quite a few things that can play into stuttering.
FFS, there was that whole thing with the X-Box controller plugged in, just to mention one. Not a problem for everyone, but a PITA for those that experienced it.
Stuttering sucks balls.....and can be e real bitch, unless Google or YouTube saves the day and offers a solution.
But anyways, you might look into the guide by helifax to disable processes prior to launching the game, "as a great place to start"
It helped with some of the games he was having some issues with.
So I wonder with the OPs setup - How much RAM and what bios settings/speed? What type of HDD and what kind of speed?
You could run a test somewhere like here:
http://www.userbenchmark.com/
and see how your components rate against others of their ilk? Perhaps something is set up wrong with the RAM or HDD?
nah its not that, I get outstanding on the scores for that test on every component, I have 16GB of new ram just installed. I just think my expectations are too high, I want 60fps all the time with a single card and maybe that just isnt possible with these power hungry games like Fallout 4, although i was surprised Mankind Divided performed so badly as well. the only recent game I tried that was near flawless was Alien Isolation. I might try Doom 3 out due to the enclosed level design. Thanks for the input, I dony want to seem negative about 3D vision but it cant be denied that to get this great effect it is harder work than it should be :-(
Just to add. in Fallout 4 my processor is pretty much maxed out so think thats the bottleneck, the GPU uses around 70% to 80% in most areas, although at times the GPU maxes out, but not as much as the CPU. So guess in this game the 1080 ti wouldn't do much...
Windows 7
Intel i5 6600k overclocked to 4.5GHZ
RAM - 16GB
GPU - Evga GTX 1080
Screen - Benq w1070 Projector 1280×720 res (edid override)
There are quite a few things that can play into stuttering.
FFS, there was that whole thing with the X-Box controller plugged in, just to mention one. Not a problem for everyone, but a PITA for those that experienced it.
Stuttering sucks balls.....and can be e real bitch, unless Google or YouTube saves the day and offers a solution.
But anyways, you might look into the guide by helifax to disable processes prior to launching the game, "as a great place to start"
It helped with some of the games he was having some issues with.