01-31-2019 07:50 AM
01-31-2019 07:54 AM
01-31-2019 11:50 AM
01-31-2019 12:05 PM
01-31-2019 02:53 PM
GATOxVoS said:
nVidia 188.31????? How are you even able to obtain those drivers? You should at least be on the most stable 4xx.xx series (depending on your card, but I suggest getting 417.22 unless you have a RTX 2060), as those will have the best VR compatibility (unless I'm missing something about these older drivers and VR).
Also, I haven't run the Oculus Debug Tool, but if you're getting a performance headroom of negative-fifteen percent I believe that means you actually aren't getting a smooth experience; that you might actually not be getting an accurate reading of 90 FPS, or if your are indeed getting 90 FPS that it's happening when the tracking system doesn't have to do lots of processing
What is your complete PC setup, make/model of all parts attached to your PC?
Also to note: For some months now, I've been getting double hands while Home 2.0 is active and I open up the Oculus start menu. It's not really double-drawing frames, but just a silly bug that overlays the start menu hands on top of the Home 2.0 hands. But, if that's not the case you're having, disregard this little tid-bit.
01-31-2019 06:36 PM
02-01-2019 03:59 AM
GATOxVoS said:
The issue with the hands though is that my setup---although it overlays the hands in certain cases---does not affect performance at all; it's really just a graphics bug that doesn't hurt anything but my faith in QA 😉 so we'll have to keep digging for your true issue.
It does sound like you might need to reinstall things, before that painful adventure begins, here are some more questions:
-What OS are you running; Windows 10/8/7?
----When's the last time you've done a clean install of your OS? Clean as in complete wipe of the disk then install.
-What make/model PSU do you have? Same with motherboard?
-How are your temps and voltage on the CPU looking? 5.2 Ghz is pretty impressive on an 8700k (I could only dream that my next intel CPU can make it to 5.0 Ghz; 5.2 Ghz would have me bragging to all my friends, haha). Checking GPU temps as well is always a good thing, just to cover all the bases.
----SideNote1: If you're looking for good monitoring software, I'd suggest hwmonitor as its pretty lightweight and covers almost all your bases (downside is that I believe it is not hardware-level monitoring, so temps/voltages may be a couple points off of the true values).
----SideNote2: I'd try taking your CPU back to stock and seeing what happens if you haven't already.
Same goes for your RAM if you have it overclocked or on an XMP profile (like @Bodphast said).
-When you tested your different GPU's did you uninstall the AMD drivers when switching to a nVidia card (and vice-versa) with DDU, and do clean installs of the drivers (as in not letting the Windows OS install their copy of the nVidia drivers)?
-Are your motherboard BIOS and Chipset drivers up-to-date?
02-01-2019 10:56 AM