


Hard Drive: Western Digital 250GB WD2500JD-00GBB0 SATA Sound Card: Creative SoundBlaster Audigy 2 ZS Video Card: EVGA GeForce GTX 560 Ti Superclocked (02G-P3-2089-KB) Memory: Kingston HyperX KHX1600C8D3K2/4GX 4GB (2GB 256M x 64-Bit x 2 pcs.) DDR3-1600MHz CL8 240-Pin DIMM Kit (couldn't hurt - well maybe my wallet: $120)ģ. Replace PSU with one with more wattage capability. Underclocked System RAM to JEDEC 1333MHz (from XMP 1600MHz)ġ. (likely not a software issue - crashed in XP and Win7)ĥ. Reformatted and reinstalled Windows XP and Windows 7. Remove (completely) and reinstall v296.10 video card drivers.
Nvidia geforce gtx 560 ti driver crash update#
Update MB BIOS to version version 2303.ģ. This is a list of things I've tried that unfortunately were unsuccessful in fixing the problem:Ģ.
Nvidia geforce gtx 560 ti driver crash drivers#
This indicates that the crash is not a trapable error and goes beyond the kernel mode drivers which usually means the crash is due to a hardware problem. The crash is not a BSOD error or any error that is logged by the system. If the driver is already installed on your system, updating (overwrite-installing) may fix various issues, add new functions, or just upgrade to the available version. The only way to recover is to hard-reset the system. The package provides the installation files for NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti (Graphics Adapter WDDM2.0) Graphics Driver version 21. There have been a few crashes since then and one today while I was playing League of Legends. The first crash was during a youtube video, shortly after I full screened the video. It was working great until about 2 weeks ago when it had its first crash. The crash itself looks like a severe case of bad GPU memory and causes a complete lock-up of the system. Hi, I recently purchased the 01G-P3-1561-AR GTX 560 Ti graphics card about 3 months ago. However, after having spent time in a game that heavily taxes the video card, if I then proceed to watch video, I can be reasonably assured of a crash. Playing games (even those that heavily tax the video card) work perfectly with no problems. The Video card crash occasionally appears mostly when watching video. However, the PSU I'm using is a dual 12v rail 500W with 14A on the first rail and 15A on the second rail for a total of 29A (14A + 15A = 29A) total output capability. The video card spec sheet (a requirement for a minimum of a 500W PSU with at least 30A on the 12v rail.

I'm experiencing a problem with a geforce 560 Ti crashing while watching video after playing games. Please read the following carefully as I've tried to be as detailed as possible.
