What you're describing is often called 'hitching'. Try downloading a Linux Live image that you can dump to a USB key or CDROM and try booting and running that OS and see if the hitching continues. Now, it probably won't have all the accelerated drivers you're running in Windows, but that could help determine if it's a basic hard issue (like memory or something like that) or a software issue, like an app or driver in windows.
This might not be helpful, but I've had issues like this before where troubleshooting the problem didn't lead to any positive results. In those cases I simply formatted and reinstalled the OS to fix the issue.
Some people might consider that an extreme solution, but in reality most personal PC's should be formatted every so often, just backup anything important on an external drive or something.
I actually did this last night. I pulled the data I wanted to keep and wiped the drive and did a fresh install. Was hoping that it would do the trick since it's been a while that I've done this but unfortunately the problem persisted even with a fresh OS install
Dying os hdd
Shame you don't have integrated graphics. I'd say try running it with a different GPU for a bit and see what happens.
Could be an early sign of SSD failure. This also happened to me, albeit on a mac, so trying the other disk may help.
Mouse freezing like that is either a hardware or a driver problem. I suspect hardware.
Check your hardware for bad caps. Mainly the PSU and the motherboard. Catalytic capacitors should have flat tops. If they are bulging even a little, or have dried liquid on top, even a little bit, they are busted.
Catalytic
Electrolytic?
The capacitor plague is mostly behind us, but there could still have been some out there in 2016.
I took a close look at all my caps and didn't find any that looked damaged or leaking, although I do still suspect it could be the motherboard. Still trying out a few ideas from the other comments and I'm going to borrow some parts tomorrow. So I'll hopefully have a solution by the end of the weekend
Might also check your power supply voltages. Try a different wall outlet, preferably on a circuit that doesn't have any other power hungry devices plugged into it.
Have you run a memory stress test?
That seems to be the missing item in your initial list above.
get memtest on a boot device and run it do the full suite. Yes it takes a while and is a PITA because of it.
I was almost certain the Ram was going to be the issue, because you're right it's the one thing I didn't check, but so far memtest hasn't given me any errors. I did the test 2 sticks at a time as well. First 2 sticks checked out and it looks like the next 2 are about to as well. Thanks for the input tho, didn't know about memtest until you mentioned it so at least I have it for future reference
Seemed to be the first easy punch in what you had not looked at.
Next thing I would try... even if you arent familiar its easy to do.
boot with a linux disk, use it in the same ways, cura runs on it, web browsers, and all those internet things. see if the problem occurs there. While I understand it wouldnt solve the problem if it doesnt occur. It would narrow it down more to software than to hardware.
For sure. I'm going to take this as an opportunity to start learning Linux. Been wanting to migrate over to it for quite some and it seems like there are a decent amount of people on here who know their way around it
check the event logs, stuff to worry about will be listed as critical monitor the active processes: %cpu_load/%memory_load during these events, sort by highest to see what's busy
reseat ram and run a stress test on them, try using one at a time. my last glitch was down to the 2nd pair of 16Gb DIMMS, maybe it was the wrong overclock settings in BIOS, I haven't bothered looking, I just took them out and ran with 16Gb
It could be the hard drive, seems unlikely with a SSD though, GPU's and especially drivers can be glitchy, if you have an old one lying around then try using that for a few days
right on, I'll give those a shot, thanks!
It's either your hard drive or your video card. Update firmware or replace.
I suspect a problem with the motherboard.
I'm starting to lean towards this, although I did closely inspect all the capacitors on the mobo and didn't find any that looked damaged/leaking. Gonna borrow a friend's PC tomorrow to swap some parts to narrow it down more tho
Did you run task manager to see if there is anything at 100% hdd cpu mem? Also look there for a process that’s hogging resources.
I sure did but I didn't find anything that's taking up my resources. Currently running memtest again on my other 2 sticks of ram and so far everything is checking out.
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