F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Evga 1080 sc

Evga 1080 sc

Evga 1080 sc

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CiscoMiner
Senior Member
500
03-27-2016, 11:21 PM
#1
I'm using an evga 1080sc and I've been overclocking it with MSI after burner. Everyone says to raise the core voltage fully, but I was unsure if that's safe. I lowered it to 75% instead of 100 and performance hasn't changed much. Is there anything wrong with keeping it at 100?
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CiscoMiner
03-27-2016, 11:21 PM #1

I'm using an evga 1080sc and I've been overclocking it with MSI after burner. Everyone says to raise the core voltage fully, but I was unsure if that's safe. I lowered it to 75% instead of 100 and performance hasn't changed much. Is there anything wrong with keeping it at 100?

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filcio1234
Member
211
04-11-2016, 09:47 PM
#2
Well, adjustments are limited.
It depends on the testing setup. If the GPU wasn’t getting full utilization, it might not require maximum voltage for proper function.
The maximum voltage level is definitely acceptable, Nvidia enforces this closely. It doesn’t guarantee the card won’t overheat or slow down, but achieving overclocking involves balancing carefully. Generally, higher voltages are needed to boost clock speeds, though Pascal tends to be more temperature-sensitive. Undervolting could actually assist in certain situations.
I own a 1080 SC with a water block and maintain it at around 2100Mhz. My efforts to reduce voltage consistently resulted in crashes. During the initial weeks, when I had an air cooler on, it automatically increased to 2012Mhz, so overclocking only provided a modest improvement. I never pushed the system to its limits enough to trigger throttling.
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filcio1234
04-11-2016, 09:47 PM #2

Well, adjustments are limited.
It depends on the testing setup. If the GPU wasn’t getting full utilization, it might not require maximum voltage for proper function.
The maximum voltage level is definitely acceptable, Nvidia enforces this closely. It doesn’t guarantee the card won’t overheat or slow down, but achieving overclocking involves balancing carefully. Generally, higher voltages are needed to boost clock speeds, though Pascal tends to be more temperature-sensitive. Undervolting could actually assist in certain situations.
I own a 1080 SC with a water block and maintain it at around 2100Mhz. My efforts to reduce voltage consistently resulted in crashes. During the initial weeks, when I had an air cooler on, it automatically increased to 2012Mhz, so overclocking only provided a modest improvement. I never pushed the system to its limits enough to trigger throttling.

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RepoRizer
Posting Freak
872
04-12-2016, 12:47 AM
#3
I understand you're trying to verify if your setup handles high RPMs without exceeding 72°C. Let's explore ways to confirm this.
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RepoRizer
04-12-2016, 12:47 AM #3

I understand you're trying to verify if your setup handles high RPMs without exceeding 72°C. Let's explore ways to confirm this.

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Mottcru2
Junior Member
48
04-12-2016, 01:18 AM
#4
I would monitor the frequency under load. I prefer tools like 3d mark Firestrike or AIDA64. If it drops below 2100Mhz that indicates throttling.
It doesn’t exceed 72C much, suggesting it isn’t operating as hard. I’m aware my device would quickly reach the preset throttle limit around 83C and oscillate near 1982Mhz, which is still acceptable.
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Mottcru2
04-12-2016, 01:18 AM #4

I would monitor the frequency under load. I prefer tools like 3d mark Firestrike or AIDA64. If it drops below 2100Mhz that indicates throttling.
It doesn’t exceed 72C much, suggesting it isn’t operating as hard. I’m aware my device would quickly reach the preset throttle limit around 83C and oscillate near 1982Mhz, which is still acceptable.

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Koollojoe
Posting Freak
830
04-12-2016, 07:28 AM
#5
Currently I'm running Valley Benchmark 10 and it's putting a lot of strain on the GPU, but I'm not sure why.
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Koollojoe
04-12-2016, 07:28 AM #5

Currently I'm running Valley Benchmark 10 and it's putting a lot of strain on the GPU, but I'm not sure why.

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Jezz_
Member
60
04-27-2016, 11:38 PM
#6
There was a chance of getting lucky with a GPU that doesn't require much voltage to operate. This can happen occasionally. Or perhaps the voltage wasn't adjusted, and/or the GPU boost is interfering and providing what it needs even if your settings are different. You might want to use some independent monitoring tools to detect this behavior.
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Jezz_
04-27-2016, 11:38 PM #6

There was a chance of getting lucky with a GPU that doesn't require much voltage to operate. This can happen occasionally. Or perhaps the voltage wasn't adjusted, and/or the GPU boost is interfering and providing what it needs even if your settings are different. You might want to use some independent monitoring tools to detect this behavior.

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Cute_Ari
Member
68
04-28-2016, 12:41 AM
#7
I completed a AIDA 64 run at 2100, but it occasionally drops to 2088 for a brief moment before returning to 2100. Is this thermal throttling when it hits 52°C?
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Cute_Ari
04-28-2016, 12:41 AM #7

I completed a AIDA 64 run at 2100, but it occasionally drops to 2088 for a brief moment before returning to 2100. Is this thermal throttling when it hits 52°C?

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xxMiniWolfjexx
Junior Member
6
04-30-2016, 10:27 PM
#8
And when playing Fortnite, the boost doesn't reach 2100. My frames are capped at 144, and I can only get it to boost when I enable unlimited frames. That should still work.
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xxMiniWolfjexx
04-30-2016, 10:27 PM #8

And when playing Fortnite, the boost doesn't reach 2100. My frames are capped at 144, and I can only get it to boost when I enable unlimited frames. That should still work.

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tonykart18
Member
66
05-01-2016, 12:21 AM
#9
It seems like a power throttle might be the issue.
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tonykart18
05-01-2016, 12:21 AM #9

It seems like a power throttle might be the issue.

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kulan3
Member
174
05-06-2016, 10:31 AM
#10
Yes, it simply means the GPU isn't required to operate at full capacity to hit 144 FPS. That's completely typical.
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kulan3
05-06-2016, 10:31 AM #10

Yes, it simply means the GPU isn't required to operate at full capacity to hit 144 FPS. That's completely typical.