A New Guy
New Member
Whenever I start to play a game, it will run beautifully for approximately 30 seconds. After that time limit is up, the frame rate will progressively get worse until the game is pretty much unplayable. I discovered that if I were to press Ctrl + Alt + Del and then wait a while before getting back into the game, the game will run fine again for about another 10-20 seconds (depending on how long I wait before getting back into it). I've also noticed that as soon as I quit that game and start up a new game, it will start off with having horrible frame rates. This is true for any game I own. Regardless if it is Left 4 Dead 2 or Halo 1, the problem will persist. My setup should be able to run Left 4 Dead 2 greatly, and it laughs at Halo 1. Does anybody have an idea of what could be causing this? I recently purchased a new motherboard, processor, and RAM. I replaced the components of my computer by uninstalling pretty much anything relating to the motherboard on my computer (including network drivers, graphics card drivers, IDE controller, etc.) Upon replacing my components, I eventually was able to install motherboard drivers through a USB (since this new motherboard has one less IDE slot than the old one, and thus I cannot use my DVD drive any longer until I find a solution to that problem). I installed chipset, processor, internet, audio, and graphics card drivers. I reactivated Windows, and as far as I'm concerned, everything appears to run the same as before. The only differences are that I may not have BIOS currently set up (which I do not know how to install) and my computer has frozen twice. Both times, I was able to move the mouse while everything else froze, then mouse froze, then a noise started coming from my computer. Rebooted and everything was fine. Coincidentally, both freezes happened on the same web page. I presume that as long as I don't go on it anymore, I would be fine. However, it was a harmless youtube channel that my friend had, so I am still suspicious. Anyway, this is basically all I've done. My games ran fine before the upgrade. Immediately afterwards is when I started to encounter this problem. I'm not sure if it could be the motherboard, drivers, or if my graphics card is randomly starting to go faulty now. My computer is essentially a 5-year-old eMachines T6212 with a few upgrades.
Power Supply: Upgraded to 400 Watts approximately 3 years ago.
CPU: Upgraded to Athlon II X4 635 2.9 GHz this week.
Motherboard: Upgraded to MSI 760GM-E51 this week.
RAM: Upgraded to DDR3 4Gb 1600MHz this week. However, using CPU-Z, I've noticed it is running at 666.7 MHz instead of the 1333 MHz it should be running (since mobo supports up to 1333 normally, but 1600 with overclock [which I didn't do]).
Video Card: Upgraded to Nvidia GeForce GT 240 6 months ago. Using CPU-Z, I've noticed that under the profile named "Current", it shows that core is at 140 MHz, Shaders at 280 MHz, and memory at 140 MHz. However, in 3D applications, it shows 550 MHz, 1340 MHz, and 790 MHz. I'm not sure if this is a problem at all, but I decided to post it just in case.
Power Supply: Upgraded to 400 Watts approximately 3 years ago.
CPU: Upgraded to Athlon II X4 635 2.9 GHz this week.
Motherboard: Upgraded to MSI 760GM-E51 this week.
RAM: Upgraded to DDR3 4Gb 1600MHz this week. However, using CPU-Z, I've noticed it is running at 666.7 MHz instead of the 1333 MHz it should be running (since mobo supports up to 1333 normally, but 1600 with overclock [which I didn't do]).
Video Card: Upgraded to Nvidia GeForce GT 240 6 months ago. Using CPU-Z, I've noticed that under the profile named "Current", it shows that core is at 140 MHz, Shaders at 280 MHz, and memory at 140 MHz. However, in 3D applications, it shows 550 MHz, 1340 MHz, and 790 MHz. I'm not sure if this is a problem at all, but I decided to post it just in case.