GPU saturated?
Yzaag
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Nealts Posted messages 13 Status Member -
Nealts Posted messages 13 Status Member -
Hello everyone!
I have an Asus ROG laptop with an Intel Core i5-7300HQ CPU at 2.50GHz, 8GB of RAM, and an Nvidia GTX 1050 with 4GB of RAM.
There is an ASUS ROG Gaming Center control panel that gives me access to some information like the CPU and GPU temperature and memory.
Here's my problem: the memory of my GPU is almost constantly stuck at 3504 MHz, and I don't know why. I assume this isn't good because the bar indicating this is red when all the others are light blue.
Do you know where this might be coming from?
Thank you!
I have an Asus ROG laptop with an Intel Core i5-7300HQ CPU at 2.50GHz, 8GB of RAM, and an Nvidia GTX 1050 with 4GB of RAM.
There is an ASUS ROG Gaming Center control panel that gives me access to some information like the CPU and GPU temperature and memory.
Here's my problem: the memory of my GPU is almost constantly stuck at 3504 MHz, and I don't know why. I assume this isn't good because the bar indicating this is red when all the others are light blue.
Do you know where this might be coming from?
Thank you!
3 answers
Good evening,
Indeed, this is a concern; normally the memory should never be saturated, except in cases of heavy use (video games, software rendering).
Are you experiencing any slowdowns?
Try looking in your Task Manager, without going through the ASUS Rog Gaming Center, to see if the result is the same.
Right-click on your taskbar, the one that runs along the bottom of your screen, to the right of Cortana from Windows 10 (the white search bar). So right-click / Task Manager / Performance. And look at the bottom for the usage of the graphics processor.
Indeed, this is a concern; normally the memory should never be saturated, except in cases of heavy use (video games, software rendering).
Are you experiencing any slowdowns?
Try looking in your Task Manager, without going through the ASUS Rog Gaming Center, to see if the result is the same.
Right-click on your taskbar, the one that runs along the bottom of your screen, to the right of Cortana from Windows 10 (the white search bar). So right-click / Task Manager / Performance. And look at the bottom for the usage of the graphics processor.