F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Does it make sense to push the clock speed of a ZOTAC GTX 1660 6GB?

Does it make sense to push the clock speed of a ZOTAC GTX 1660 6GB?

Does it make sense to push the clock speed of a ZOTAC GTX 1660 6GB?

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Marine_Ji
Junior Member
19
04-05-2026, 08:48 AM
#1
Hey, does this deal make sense? If I go ahead with it, what percentage of my skills will I use up?
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Marine_Ji
04-05-2026, 08:48 AM #1

Hey, does this deal make sense? If I go ahead with it, what percentage of my skills will I use up?

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TanookiYoshi
Junior Member
17
04-06-2026, 07:36 PM
#2
It comes down to how you look at things. When you have a 1980x1200 screen, your monitor is probably set to 60 or 75 frames per second. If the games you play can do that fast, then boosting the power of your graphics card won't really matter unless you are just testing how well it works in benchmarks. It only helps if your graphics card isn't powerful enough to keep up with the refresh rate; pushing it harder might make things run smoother and more responsive in real life. So go ahead and set everything to default settings. If a game at high settings doesn't get smooth enough frames, then try tweaking the power. But if it already runs smoothly even on low settings, there won't be any benefit from making changes now.
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TanookiYoshi
04-06-2026, 07:36 PM #2

It comes down to how you look at things. When you have a 1980x1200 screen, your monitor is probably set to 60 or 75 frames per second. If the games you play can do that fast, then boosting the power of your graphics card won't really matter unless you are just testing how well it works in benchmarks. It only helps if your graphics card isn't powerful enough to keep up with the refresh rate; pushing it harder might make things run smoother and more responsive in real life. So go ahead and set everything to default settings. If a game at high settings doesn't get smooth enough frames, then try tweaking the power. But if it already runs smoothly even on low settings, there won't be any benefit from making changes now.

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sand135
Junior Member
12
04-12-2026, 04:20 AM
#3
That answer is still a mystery because we don't know how much you can push your graphics card's power without breaking the thing. You should definitely try cuZ because there is always good value for money. On my 2080 super, playing Call of Duty at max settings on 2K resolution before I overclocked it gave me about 120 frames per second. Now that I've done it, I'm getting between 145 and 155 FPS while gaming.
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sand135
04-12-2026, 04:20 AM #3

That answer is still a mystery because we don't know how much you can push your graphics card's power without breaking the thing. You should definitely try cuZ because there is always good value for money. On my 2080 super, playing Call of Duty at max settings on 2K resolution before I overclocked it gave me about 120 frames per second. Now that I've done it, I'm getting between 145 and 155 FPS while gaming.

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ComboHax
Member
184
04-12-2026, 12:31 PM
#4
I need to buy a new computer. I have a screen that is 1920 by 1200 pixels. Should I try to make my graphics card faster, or should I just buy an upgrade to the graphics card? I already own some parts like a Ryzen 5 processor and an AMD graphics card.
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ComboHax
04-12-2026, 12:31 PM #4

I need to buy a new computer. I have a screen that is 1920 by 1200 pixels. Should I try to make my graphics card faster, or should I just buy an upgrade to the graphics card? I already own some parts like a Ryzen 5 processor and an AMD graphics card.

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4um_For_Rose
Member
86
04-19-2026, 04:21 PM
#5
Value is up to YOU to decide. You have the power to answer your own question. Chip makers group their chips together and pick the better ones to overclock them before putting them on sale for more money. Maybe you can get an extra boost, but maybe not. They try to make a difference by adding cool things like fancy fans that also cost more. If you need more power, think about getting a stronger card from the start instead.
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4um_For_Rose
04-19-2026, 04:21 PM #5

Value is up to YOU to decide. You have the power to answer your own question. Chip makers group their chips together and pick the better ones to overclock them before putting them on sale for more money. Maybe you can get an extra boost, but maybe not. They try to make a difference by adding cool things like fancy fans that also cost more. If you need more power, think about getting a stronger card from the start instead.

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Ward12
Posting Freak
895
04-19-2026, 05:59 PM
#6
I'm going to buy a 2060 super, too! If that's possible, I'll add a 650 PSU as well.
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Ward12
04-19-2026, 05:59 PM #6

I'm going to buy a 2060 super, too! If that's possible, I'll add a 650 PSU as well.

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DRHUNTERZ245
Junior Member
10
04-26-2026, 08:43 PM
#7
Yeah, that setup has plenty of power for gaming or heavy stuff. It's more than enough at 530 watts. Even though I'll probably stick to stock settings on the graphics card since I don't want to risk damaging it by pushing it too hard.
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DRHUNTERZ245
04-26-2026, 08:43 PM #7

Yeah, that setup has plenty of power for gaming or heavy stuff. It's more than enough at 530 watts. Even though I'll probably stick to stock settings on the graphics card since I don't want to risk damaging it by pushing it too hard.

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TrueRiven
Member
73
04-27-2026, 01:36 PM
#8
It depends on how you look at it. When using a 1980x1200 screen, your monitor usually shows 60 or 75 frames per second. If the games you play can already reach that speed or go faster, then adding more power from the graphics card won't help anything except show up on test charts. It only matters if the cards is too slow to match the screen's refresh rate; in that case, increasing the clock speed might make your game run smoother. So just leave the card at its normal settings. If the game still shows a low frame count even when running at "Ultra," then try turning the clock higher. But if it already shows a high frame count, there is no benefit to overclocking.
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TrueRiven
04-27-2026, 01:36 PM #8

It depends on how you look at it. When using a 1980x1200 screen, your monitor usually shows 60 or 75 frames per second. If the games you play can already reach that speed or go faster, then adding more power from the graphics card won't help anything except show up on test charts. It only matters if the cards is too slow to match the screen's refresh rate; in that case, increasing the clock speed might make your game run smoother. So just leave the card at its normal settings. If the game still shows a low frame count even when running at "Ultra," then try turning the clock higher. But if it already shows a high frame count, there is no benefit to overclocking.