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You can try installing 355.98 the newest WHQL driver. Make sure you do a clean install and if that doesn't fix it you may have to use the DDU uninstaller: http://www.guru3d.com/files-details/...-download.html
and then re-install. DDU cleans up left over bits from previous installs that are not always taken care of by the NVIDIA installer.
The latest driver does indeed seem to fix the kernel error. I haven't seen it since installing 355.98.
Spoke to soon. Just got it.
The Windows 10 Nvidia drivers are rife with these TDR. I have had the best luck with 353.62 - no TDR. Newer versions I got TDR waking from sleep among other problems Nvidia has introduced, like breaking display scaling.
I am on the latest 355.98 driver and I am getting this issue frequently. Sometimes it does not recover completely locking up my system. This is on top of the random restarts and lock ups I have been having with windows 10...
I was solved this problem by using the provided tool Driver Talent from drivethelife.com.
The moderator was told me to download the older stable nvidia driver 340.76 and reinstall with that old graphic drivers.
I am using Windows 10 Pro x86, an old motherboard P5KPL-AM, CPU is Core 2 Quad Q9400, Kingston HyperX DDR2 2x2GB, Intel SSD 320 80GB and a GTX460 graphic card.
I like to show out my rig to prove that I'm using an old machine to run the latest version of Windows system. My computer was obsoleted and they are too old to run all the latest graphic drivers. That's why I must stay at 340.76 to keep at the best compatibility. Just turn off the update checker and notification from the nvidia icon under the system tray.
I was tried tdrdelay=10, maximum performance but none of these method are working. Finally the only best solution is rollback my graphic drivers to 340.76.
I have not gotten a TDR since installing Driver 355.98. I used to use GTX 460 man did it run hot and loud. I updated to a GTX 750 Ti