My pc is a good pc but I’m getting really low FPS drops constantly I have a 2060 and 16 gb ddr4 3600 ram newly bought and an asrock a320m-hdv Motherboard with standard hdd and a ryzen 5 1600 with a 600 watt psu but still getting low FPS I even updated my drivers idk what the problem is can someone please explain if you can.
crjdriver told you the problem was probably the PSU in your other thread, I see you have a 600W one now, what make and model is it ?
BTW the 115 or 230 Volt setting should be set to correspond with your mains electricity voltage.
115 in the USA or 230 in Europe/UK
What country are you in ?
My pc is a good pc but I'm getting really low FPS drops constantly I have a 2060 and 16 gb ddr4 3600 ram newly bought and an asrock a320m-hdv Motherboard with standard hdd and a ryzen 5 1600 with a 600 watt psu but still getting low FPS I even updated my drivers idk what the problem is can someone please explain if you can.
From what I can glean about your hardware from you post.....you're running a Gen 1 AMD CPU from the specs I found on newegg.com. So your bottle neck is your CPU.
I would upgrade that to a Gen 3 Ryzen 7 3700. You mobo supports it. That would make all the difference.
Most modern [quality] pw supplies have auto sense ie there is no switch since the unit detects the input current automatically. What exact pw supply did you install?
Next you really need to understand something; you have some miss matched parts. Asrock makes some fine boards [in fact I am typing this on a high end asrock] however your board is an entry level or budget board. You have a mid-level processor and a gaming type video card. Installing a gaming card in your system is analogous to installing a performance cam in an econobox car. It will run however it will never run well.
In order to game effectively, ALL of the parts need to work together to achieve a high level of performance. A well thought out/designed gaming system starts with a high end pw supply, a performance motherboard, a processor that keeps up with the video card, a case with good airflow, etc, etc.
Most modern [quality] pw supplies have auto sense ie there is no switch since the unit detects the input current automatically. What exact pw supply did you install?
Next you really need to understand something; you have some miss matched parts. Asrock makes some fine boards [in fact I am typing this on a high end asrock] however your board is an entry level or budget board. You have a mid-level processor and a gaming type video card. Installing a gaming card in your system is analogous to installing a performance cam in an econobox car. It will run however it will never run well.
In order to game effectively, ALL of the parts need to work together to achieve a high level of performance. A well thought out/designed gaming system starts with a high end pw supply, a performance motherboard, a processor that keeps up with the video card, a case with good airflow, etc, etc.
What are your temps and voltages with the new board; specifically cpu temp, 12V, 5V, and 3.3V values? The support page for your board appears to be down at this time so I cannot check if there is monitoring software available for download. Almost all asus boards have monitoring software on the support page.
Post your temps and voltages twice; once under a normal load and again while running a stress test. Use any of the following for the stress test; prime95, OCCT, or Realbench [all free downloads] Let the stress test run for at least 2min to stabilize temps/voltages. Post those here.
Ryzen 1600 is nearly the same IPC as a 4790k but it's a slightly better processor going forward because of the extra threads and you don't get into much bottlenecking until you get higher up on the GPU scale. Something else is up with the OP's rig.
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