Upmetrics

Gpu — Reset

GPUs have built-in thermal limits. If your card hits a certain temperature (usually north of 85°C–90°C), it may throttle its speed or reset entirely to prevent physical damage to the silicon. 3. Unstable Overclocks

: Click the circular arrow icon at the bottom of the interface to reset core and memory clocks to factory levels. 3. Reinstalling or "Resetting" the Driver (DDU) gpu reset

Normally, the CPU sends instructions to the Graphics Processing Unit (GPU). If the GPU takes too long to process those instructions (usually more than 2 seconds), Windows assumes the hardware is frozen. To prevent a total system "Blue Screen of Death" (BSOD), Windows restarts the graphics driver. This "reset" clears the GPU's current memory and restarts the rendering engine. Common Causes of GPU Resets 1. Outdated or Corrupt Drivers GPUs have built-in thermal limits

Modern GPUs are power-hungry. If your PSU cannot provide a steady, clean flow of electricity during a "transient spike" (a sudden surge in power demand during a busy game scene), the GPU will lose stability and reset. 5. Hardware Degradation Unstable Overclocks : Click the circular arrow icon