Skurge's suggestion is probably the best. Use driver sweeper, get rid of everything GPU related, and then install the latest driver.
I just installed this video card maybe 1 week ago and did a full driver sweep at that time (including uninstalling Afterburner and then reinstalling).
Been there on both a GT220 and a GTS450, all has to do with dual monitor setups being a driver crapshoot. Basically, do a driver sweeper full uninstall in safe mode then a reinstall the current drivers. If that doesn't fix it you have to try older drivers until it works properly. That or wait for the next driver revision to see if it clocks properly.
I'm surprised this unstable aspect of nVidia down-clocking doesn't come up often in the "Green or Red drivers!" threads. Do most gamers stick to a single monitor setup just so these kinds of things don't crop up and ruin their gaming?
I am beginning to suspect this might be the case.
Oddly enough (to me anyways) I disabled Vsync in the Dragon Age config menu and I haven't had a repeat occurrency of the issue ever since. Normally by now I'd have had 3 or 4 locked low-clocks after this many hours.
Does that add up at all though? Would disabling Vsync have anything to do with this? Maybe it does because I have 2 screens but the game is playing fullscreen on one screen and Vsync on such a 3D+2D situation just screws with the video card? :hmm:
wow you really arnt having good luck with those 460's are ya.
Have you tried putting The power management mode to Prefer maximum performance? When i had mine on the default adaptive it sometimes gave me strange clocks when i was stability testing. I have had no issues with it keeping correct clocks since changing to max performance.
I don't blame the 460 really, just one of those situations where I'm getting beat down to the point where I just want the damned thing (my rig) to simply work.
NVidia released a bios update not to long ago for the 460's that had to do with power saving features. You might see if MSI has a vga flashing tool and update that BIOS. I updated my gigabyte this week and found more stability in high overclock.
It's not your system though that's for sure.
I'm definitely going to look into the bios update possibility. Thanks for mentioning it. :thumbsup:
I think some reputable website should do a really in depth review of how cards handle more than on monitor when they are different resolutions.
Seems there are a lot of glitches regardless who you buy from.
YES :thumbsup:
I have sli cyclones and have something similar happen in less demanding games. 1 or both gpu's will attempt to run at 405mhz.
Under
Nvidia control panel
Manage settings
program settings
each individual game
power management mode - prefer maximum performance
This allows me to set global mode to adaptive.
One final thing, under windows 7 Power settings.
Advanced settings
pci-e
link state power management - set to OFF
these settings allow my gpu's to downclock and up clock normally in 2d etc
you need to reboot sometimes after these settings changes or global changes to Nvidia power settings.
Another vote for trying to force maximum power settings rather than adaptive. I get the same problem in certain games. Nvidia's power management is buggy. I also have issues with it and using multiple monitors.
If I do this then does that mean my card will be running "full out" even when idle?
I heard it does this when you go too high on voltage to protect it from overheating. I just got my 460 today and it dropped to 405 while running Kombuster. Lowered the voltage and the speed and it hasn't done it again (yet).
Are you sure your card isn't overheating? Didn't you say you had a problem with your ramsinks?
This.
I've had this same issue when I overclocked my 460 too high.
Scale back your clockspeeds a bit.
Yeah that is the overheat (or is the over-amp?) protection kicking in. I'm not tripping that, like I said this sucker passes OCCT GPU with zero errors and the temps max out at 60C in that test. In Dragon Age my temps are more like 40C. My idle temps are 22-24C.
(This is with an artic cooler extreme)
At any rate, in my case I have duplicated the issue even when I set my clocks
lower. It doesn't seem related at all to temps or clockspeed, it just gets into some funk after a while and decides it won't clock any higher than 405MHz for some reason.
Stupid question, but you aren't playing in a windowed mode, are you? I seem to remember there being some kind of problem with some cards not kicking into 3D if gaming in a window. I think that was from a while back, but just figured I'd bring it up.
GTX460's and IDC... oil and water.
Nah, it's full screen. The clocks kick in just fine when I play, its just that after some indeterminate amount of time (usually 20-30min) then the clocks just dump down to 405MHz on me.
BTW, you shouldn't have to reboot. Just set a new clockspeed in afterburner.
when the clockspeeds get locked like that it requires a reboot.
Beast, what toyota said. I'm using Afterburner and I when the card decides 405MHz is the max then it doesn't matter what I set it to, the card just ignores the settings until I do a reboot. Does not require a cold-restart, a normal reboot initiated by windows is enough to "restore" the GTX460 to its normal operating clockspeeds.
For now my temporary solution is to disable Vsync. It doesn't bother me whether Vsync is enabled or disabled so if this is the fix then I'm ok with it. Still though, I'd like to know why Vsync eff's up my card, seems like it shouldn't.