F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Adjusting overclock settings at cooler temperatures might resolve crashes in some cases.

Adjusting overclock settings at cooler temperatures might resolve crashes in some cases.

Adjusting overclock settings at cooler temperatures might resolve crashes in some cases.

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afrveras
Junior Member
12
05-11-2016, 07:45 AM
#1
I increased my GTX 1080 with +160 cores and +250 memory, but it crashes at around 54°C sometimes during benchmarks. It becomes unstable and the benchmark fails even when temperatures are low. Some people claim they can reach +190 cores and +400 memory, though others say they can't get to +200 because the driver crashes. I own a Zotac GTX 1080 Amp Edition.
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afrveras
05-11-2016, 07:45 AM #1

I increased my GTX 1080 with +160 cores and +250 memory, but it crashes at around 54°C sometimes during benchmarks. It becomes unstable and the benchmark fails even when temperatures are low. Some people claim they can reach +190 cores and +400 memory, though others say they can't get to +200 because the driver crashes. I own a Zotac GTX 1080 Amp Edition.

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StarKillerSTF
Member
125
05-11-2016, 02:36 PM
#2
Looking through other forums using the exact model and voltage details you provided helps.
I have an EVGA 1080 SC, so I can't give you advice about it.
On my system, I'm setting the GPU to +150 and around 350 MBs with a power target of up to 120%. This is based on EVGA's own O/C software.
I don't know if this setup will work with your card.
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StarKillerSTF
05-11-2016, 02:36 PM #2

Looking through other forums using the exact model and voltage details you provided helps.
I have an EVGA 1080 SC, so I can't give you advice about it.
On my system, I'm setting the GPU to +150 and around 350 MBs with a power target of up to 120%. This is based on EVGA's own O/C software.
I don't know if this setup will work with your card.

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Reckt_By_Jason
Junior Member
10
05-11-2016, 11:31 PM
#3
Do you have sufficient power to run it? It really depends on your GPU's ability to handle higher frequencies. I suggest trying to overclock gradually. Increase the voltage carefully, but be mindful—this could damage your GPU if not done properly.
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Reckt_By_Jason
05-11-2016, 11:31 PM #3

Do you have sufficient power to run it? It really depends on your GPU's ability to handle higher frequencies. I suggest trying to overclock gradually. Increase the voltage carefully, but be mindful—this could damage your GPU if not done properly.

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ZodiacalBow
Junior Member
6
05-12-2016, 10:35 AM
#4
Do you have sufficient power to run it? It really depends on your GPU's ability to handle higher frequencies. I suggest trying to overclock gradually. Increase the voltage carefully, but be very cautious—you could damage your GPU. What voltage would you consider stable? You should never adjust voltage without prior experience.
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ZodiacalBow
05-12-2016, 10:35 AM #4

Do you have sufficient power to run it? It really depends on your GPU's ability to handle higher frequencies. I suggest trying to overclock gradually. Increase the voltage carefully, but be very cautious—you could damage your GPU. What voltage would you consider stable? You should never adjust voltage without prior experience.

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Azerious
Junior Member
5
05-13-2016, 01:54 AM
#5
Looking through other forums using your exact video card model and voltage settings as search terms.
I have an EVGA 1080 SC, so I can't give you advice about it.
On my system I'm setting the GPU to +150 and around 350 MBs with a power target of up to 120%. This is done through EVGA's own O/C software.
I don't know if this will work with your card.
A
Azerious
05-13-2016, 01:54 AM #5

Looking through other forums using your exact video card model and voltage settings as search terms.
I have an EVGA 1080 SC, so I can't give you advice about it.
On my system I'm setting the GPU to +150 and around 350 MBs with a power target of up to 120%. This is done through EVGA's own O/C software.
I don't know if this will work with your card.