bepeg4d wrote:Hi,
in general, CUDA error 700 is drivers or timeout related.
Please, use DDU to completely remove the installed drivers:
http://www.guru3d.com/files-details/dis ... nload.html
Then perform a clean installation of 417.22 drivers for your Win version.
To change the timeout, either run the Standalone installer or manually set the TdrDelay key to something like 10s or so. See here:
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/librar ... 18(v=vs.85).aspx
In the Standalone installer we set these values:
WriteRegDWORD HKLM "SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\GraphicsDrivers" TdrLevel 3
WriteRegDWORD HKLM "SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\GraphicsDrivers" TdrDelay 10jh
Some Win 10 users have set the TdrDelay at 60, to solve their stability issues with CUDA.
ciao Beppe
I tried to use DDU and then to do the clean installation of the driver 417.71 but I still have sudden crashes never happened in previous releases.
maybe the latest drivers released are less compatible with the new releases and especially with C4D R20 I point out that the change introduced required the rewriting of the pugin and not all have succeeded in the short term, with R19 I have no problems
besides, I have never had any problems with Standalone, but in the last days there were anomalous crashes here too.
The very fact that the 418.81 driver causes Octane's arrest seems to confirm that there is a clear divergence in programming.