Screen Studdering / Skipping issue

j03h4gLund

Senior member
Nov 8, 2010
354
3
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While playing online games(BF3 or Rift), every 10-20 secondsish the entire screen just freezes up for a split second. This doesn't affect video's or voice communication. Everything just freezes up for a split second then goes back to normal. The actual FPS is great and looks fine but these studders/skips are driving me insane!!

I recently upgraded my 1GB GTX 460 because of this issue and it has not helped. I tried recording a video to show the issue but the recorded video does not capture the freezes.

My specs:
CPU: Intel i5 2500k @ 4.3Ghz
MB: ASRock Z68 PRO3 GEN3
RAM: Patriot Sig 2x4 DDR3 1600
PSU: Antec 650w Earthwatts
GPU: 2GB MSI GTX 670
SSD Patriot Torqx 2 64GB
OS: Win 7 Pro 64 (licensed)
Connection: 60Mbps x 5Mbps

Here's what I've tried so far:


  • Installed all the latest drivers for my GPU after removing the old ones in safe mode with Driver Sweeper. Also ensured the on-board video card is not being used by disabling it and uninstalling those drivers as well.
  • Installed latest drivers/bios for Mobo.
  • Removed overclock on CPU.
  • Formatted & Installed Fresh Win 7 Pro 64bit + All windows updates.
  • Swapped SATA cable between PSU and SSD.
  • Installing the game on a different drive.
  • Swapped RAM from slots 1&3 to 2&4
  • Turned VSYNC off & set my Nvidia settings for performance
  • Tried running the game in low-render mode w/ everything cranked down(dx9)
  • C: Windows\system32>sfc /scannow
    Beginning system scan. This process will take some time.
    Beginning verification phase of system scan.
    Verification 100% complete.
    Windows Resource Protection did not find any integrity violations.
  • Ran Windows Memory Diagnostics Tool: No Errors
I'm starting to lose my mind - Any suggestions?
 
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j03h4gLund

Senior member
Nov 8, 2010
354
3
81
The card is in securely & properly, I have reseated it and also tried it in the other PCI-E slot since my mobo supports SLI. Still the issue remains. :'(
 

sm625

Diamond Member
May 6, 2011
8,172
137
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You need to start killing processes and services until you find the one that is causing the issue. Could be an antivirus, could be a service like LogMeIn (LogMeIn has cause a problem exactly like yours for me), could be a printer driver, or it could be genuine malware.
 

j03h4gLund

Senior member
Nov 8, 2010
354
3
81
You need to start killing processes and services until you find the one that is causing the issue. Could be an antivirus, could be a service like LogMeIn (LogMeIn has cause a problem exactly like yours for me), could be a printer driver, or it could be genuine malware.

It's a fresh install of Windows 7 Pro 64Bit with MSE as the anti-virus. Even if it was something you mentioned, wouldn't it be noticeable when not in 3d games? Because currently I can watch full screen movies with no hiccups at all.
 

j03h4gLund

Senior member
Nov 8, 2010
354
3
81
Ran it for around 5 minutes and the studders happened around 10 times. No spikes in the graphs - heres a screenshot w/ speakeasy speedtest also.

2rmawyr.jpg
 

Steltek

Diamond Member
Mar 29, 2001
3,342
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Have you tried removing MSE to see if it could be causing the problem? Also, does your SSD have the most recent available firmware installed? If you have a spare hard drive available, it might be worth throwing a clean windows install on it and try running without the SSD to eliminate it as a possible cause of the stuttering.
 
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Dstoop

Member
Sep 2, 2012
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It's a fresh install of Windows 7 Pro 64Bit with MSE as the anti-virus. Even if it was something you mentioned, wouldn't it be noticeable when not in 3d games? Because currently I can watch full screen movies with no hiccups at all.

Uninstall MSE. I had this exact issue years ago and MSE turned out to be the culprit, it's active scanning was scanning every single file and asset games accessed causing frequent stuttering. Of course that was forever ago and they may have resolved the issue or we've all thrown so much extra processor power at the problem that its not noticeable anymore, or it could be something else entirely, but i'd start there as AV software is frequently the cause of stutter in games.
 

mfenn

Elite Member
Jan 17, 2010
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www.mfenn.com
Uninstall MSE. I had this exact issue years ago and MSE turned out to be the culprit, it's active scanning was scanning every single file and asset games accessed causing frequent stuttering. Of course that was forever ago and they may have resolved the issue or we've all thrown so much extra processor power at the problem that its not noticeable anymore, or it could be something else entirely, but i'd start there as AV software is frequently the cause of stutter in games.

:thumbsup: Good point. I had a similar issue with Filezilla and MSE. The whole machine would grind to a halt when it was generating icons because MSE decided that the whole file needed to be scanned.
 

j03h4gLund

Senior member
Nov 8, 2010
354
3
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Disabled MSE via msconfig, studdering persists.

Any other tips before I start replacing pieces of this build?
 

Steltek

Diamond Member
Mar 29, 2001
3,342
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Disabled MSE via msconfig, studdering persists.

Any other tips before I start replacing pieces of this build?

Honestly, if it were me, I'd pull the SSD and try running Windows on a regular hard drive before you do anything else to eliminate the possibility that your SSD is causing the problem.

Your stuttering issue could be the SSD freezing up. The Torqx 2 uses a pretty oddball controller (Phison) and there is apparently little or no firmware development going on anywhere for it. The Corsair Nova 2 SSD uses the same controller and is giving owners fits over these exact types of issues -- apparently, some of them are even risking crossflashing of firmware from another company to get some relief (not that I advocate doing this, though -- if it is causing the problem, an RMA would be better if it is still under warranty):

http://www.overclockers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=700177
 
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j03h4gLund

Senior member
Nov 8, 2010
354
3
81
Thanks for the reply, I am going to try this when I get home. I was thinking the same thing. Luckily I have a spare 1TB F3 that is ready for a fresh installation.

Ill let you know how it goes :)
 

j03h4gLund

Senior member
Nov 8, 2010
354
3
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So I removed the SSD and formatted installed win7 on fresh 1TB F3. After installing the correct drivers/updates for everything, I loaded up Rift and started with low-render (directx9) and the problem persisted... *sigh*

I removed all drives except the SSD and it appeared to be actually be better but how could the mechanical drives affect the game when the SSD has the games and the OS?

I still need to test as I was very limited w/ my time last night but I think that may have actually been the problem.
 

LowTech

Member
May 22, 2009
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Does your MOBO has on board video? If you do, I would pull out the video card, then test the game to see if it still shuttering. Of course, you have to lower the BF game resolution. If it still shuttering, then run the CD driver came with the MOBO. I suspect it most likely the driver for the chipsets.
 

j03h4gLund

Senior member
Nov 8, 2010
354
3
81
Turns out with the SSD by itself the game still studders so that eliminates the other drives causing it.

Does your MOBO has on board video? If you do, I would pull out the video card, then test the game to see if it still shuttering. Of course, you have to lower the BF game resolution. If it still shuttering, then run the CD driver came with the MOBO. I suspect it most likely the driver for the chipsets.

Yah it does, I'll give that a try...

Should have thought of this earlier - thanks! I currently have the card disabled and no drivers installed for it but I'll def give it a try. Will let you know tomorrow how it goes.
 

MTDEW

Diamond Member
Oct 31, 1999
4,284
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I'm only replying because i saw your post about buying a new motherboard.
Things i would try before buying any new hardware.
1st Unplug any drives other than the SSD.
2nd Be sure your SATA is in AHCI mode in bios/UEFI before installation.
1: disable the 2500k's video....
In UEFI Advanced/northbridge/ IGD multimonitor - Disable
Primary Graphics adapter PCI Express
2: disable legacy USB 3.0 support in UEFI (for troubleshooting, you can re-enable later)
3: Clean Install of Win7 w/SP1 if possible (see number 5: first!)
4: Install all of the following.
Install Intel INF driver Update Utility Latest INF is Version:9.2.3.1022
REBOOT
Install Intel Management Engine Driver version 8.0.2.1410
REBOOT
Install Intel Rapid Storage Technology Driver Version:11.6.0.1030
REBOOT
Install Realtek Lan driver ver:7048
Install ASMedia USB 3.0 driver ver:1.10.1.0
Install sound driver.... If your using your onboard sound, the latest RealTek Driver is R2.70
5: Check your SSD is properly aligned. (it should be if you used Win7 to create the SSD partition)
Easiest way is to check is to download and run AS SSD benchmark.
Once started be sure your SSD is selected and look in the left top box.....iaStoreA and 1024 k should both be green and say OK.
If you have red, your SSD isn't aligned properly, you can use Gparted to align it without re-installing everything, but it takes awhile.
Or re-install Win7 and delete\create partitions on the SSD during setup of Win7 and Win7 should properly align the partiton on the SSD for you.
6: Install all windows updates.
7: Install latest video driver
8: Verify video card is running x16 using GPU-Z
9: Install and try games and see if problem persists. (allow games to install any directx or Visual C++ updates it needs)

Notice: I was very particular of what to install.
For testing, don't install any utilities, browsers, add-ons or any other programs besides windows, its updates and drivers you need. (well, i know its hard not to install antivirus software, so i'd probably still install that as soon as my Network Adapter drivers were installed)
Don't do any OS tweaks or anything yet, until you've tested.
Dont plug in any USB devices besides keyboard and mouse.,No gamepad controllers, external hard drives, printers etc..etc... NOTHING that isn't needed.

EDIT: Forgot to add, if you're on a router, disconnect it and plug internet directly to pc.
And be sure and test games online and offline to see what differs.
You can always do a Win 7 Clean Boot and start trouble shooting that way after your new installation.
 
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j03h4gLund

Senior member
Nov 8, 2010
354
3
81
1st Unplug any drives other than the SSD.
Did this.
2nd Be sure your SATA is in AHCI mode in bios/UEFI before installation.
Did this and did fresh format/install after setting to AHCI.

1:
disable the 2500k's video....
In UEFI Advanced/northbridge/ IGD multimonitor - Disable
Primary Graphics adapter PCI Express
Did this and it did not help.

2:
disable legacy USB 3.0 support in UEFI (for troubleshooting, you can re-enable later)
Did this and it did not help.

3:
Clean Install of Win7 w/SP1 if possible (see number 5: first!)
Did this and it did not help.

4:
Install all of the following.
Install Intel INF driver Update Utility Latest INF is Version:9.2.3.1022
REBOOT
Install Intel Management Engine Driver version 8.0.2.1410
REBOOT
Install Intel Rapid Storage Technology Driver Version:11.6.0.1030
REBOOT
Install Realtek Lan driver ver:7048
Install ASMedia USB 3.0 driver ver:1.10.1.0
Install sound driver.... If your using your onboard sound, the latest RealTek Driver is R2.70
Did all of this and it did not help.

5:
Check your SSD is properly aligned. (it should be if you used Win7 to create the SSD partition)
Easiest way is to check is to download and run AS SSD benchmark.
Once started be sure your SSD is selected and look in the left top box.....iaStoreA and 1024 k should both be green and say OK.
If you have red, your SSD isn't aligned properly, you can use Gparted to align it without re-installing everything, but it takes awhile.
Or re-install Win7 and delete\create partitions on the SSD during setup of Win7 and Win7 should properly align the partiton on the SSD for you.
Did this and it did not help. All were green. Ran quick and full tests.

6:
Install all windows updates.
Did this and it did not help.

7:
Install latest video driver
Did this and it did not help.

8:
Verify video card is running x16 using GPU-Z
Verified this. Also tried both PCI-E slots. Did not help.

9:
Install and try games and see if problem persists. (allow games to install any directx or Visual C++ updates it needs)
Tested and issues remain.Also I feel its important to note that the sound is not affected by these glitches
 

jolancer

Senior member
Sep 6, 2004
469
0
0
Sorry if i missed it but i didn't see you mention or anyone ask... If the stutter happens within these games Online Only?(cause you mention online) but what about offline completely?... Does it stutter at all offline?

My first assumption(after you listed that compitent list of troubleshooting you initally went through. Thats a breath of fresh air for most probably. Thx for that) was your internet connection(Located Far away from the game server your using??), or simply perhaps a connection related bug for the game if not internet issue related alone.

more random assumptions - someone correct me if im wrong but the weak part of your system also is that Motherboard, ASrock? Iv been outa hardware for few years now but isnt that one of the generic brands, cheaper then the mainstream players such as Gigabyte, MSI, DFI etc?... On cheap boards in the day i sometimes had boards that the onboard ethernet controller wouldnt even function, but plugging an aftermarket one in would work fine after disabling the onboard in BIOS.
 

Steltek

Diamond Member
Mar 29, 2001
3,342
1,084
136
more random assumptions - someone correct me if im wrong but the weak part of your system also is that Motherboard, ASrock? Iv been outa hardware for few years now but isnt that one of the generic brands, cheaper then the mainstream players such as Gigabyte, MSI, DFI etc?... On cheap boards in the day i sometimes had boards that the onboard ethernet controller wouldnt even function, but plugging an aftermarket one in would work fine after disabling the onboard in BIOS.

Asrock is now considered to be a lower-tier high-end brand now, right up there behind ASUS and Gigabyte, and makes some very good motherboards. They originally were a subsidiary of ASUS but was spun off as a separate company several years ago. The technology and engineering transfers at the spinoff made their first boards look a lot like ASUS boards, but they've really hit their own stride in the last 12-18 months. There are some very credible rumors that ASUS made a serious offer to buy Asrock back last month - we'll see how that turns out.
 
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Steltek

Diamond Member
Mar 29, 2001
3,342
1,084
136
How is your internet connected? Is it wireless, wired ethernet, or USB? Does the modem connect directly to the system, or does it go through a router? Also, when you speed test your internet connection as it is currently connected, does it test out near the rated speed (or at least where past experience tells you it should be) or is it appearing to be a lot slower than it should be?

One final thing: if you check the homegroups on your machine, is your machine a member of a homegroup? If so, try leaving it. I had a situation yesterday where membership in a homegroup on a clean Win7 install was limiting my normal 13-16 megabit connection to less than 2 megabits/s and internet browsing was literally all over the place (page delays, page loading hangups, etc). Leaving the homegroup totally eliminated the problem.
 
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