F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking gpu gone after overclock

gpu gone after overclock

gpu gone after overclock

J
Junico
Junior Member
16
01-26-2016, 11:09 AM
#1
Hey guys, I boosted my Palit GT 630 with 2GB DDR3 and adjusted the clock speeds—240 MHz for the CPU, 250 MHz for memory. After playing Skyrim Special Edition, it crashed. I checked my overclock tool and saw it dropping to zero. The NVIDIA control panel disappeared too. Do you think I damaged my GPU or something else happened?
J
Junico
01-26-2016, 11:09 AM #1

Hey guys, I boosted my Palit GT 630 with 2GB DDR3 and adjusted the clock speeds—240 MHz for the CPU, 250 MHz for memory. After playing Skyrim Special Edition, it crashed. I checked my overclock tool and saw it dropping to zero. The NVIDIA control panel disappeared too. Do you think I damaged my GPU or something else happened?

P
pantxo007
Junior Member
18
02-05-2016, 01:09 PM
#2
Inspect the MSI afterburner and attempt to repair the GeForce control panel by uninstalling and reinstalling it. If the GPU is damaged, the PC won’t display anything. Also verify the drivers. A 10 MHz clock discrepancy shouldn’t significantly affect performance; maintaining 240 should be sufficient if the issue can be resolved first.
P
pantxo007
02-05-2016, 01:09 PM #2

Inspect the MSI afterburner and attempt to repair the GeForce control panel by uninstalling and reinstalling it. If the GPU is damaged, the PC won’t display anything. Also verify the drivers. A 10 MHz clock discrepancy shouldn’t significantly affect performance; maintaining 240 should be sufficient if the issue can be resolved first.

W
Wvortel
Junior Member
6
02-05-2016, 07:51 PM
#3
Inspect the MSI afterburner and attempt to repair the GeForce control panel by uninstalling and reinstalling it. If the GPU is damaged, the PC won’t display anything. Also verify the drivers. A 10 MHz clock discrepancy shouldn’t significantly affect performance; maintaining 240 should be sufficient if the issue can be resolved first.
W
Wvortel
02-05-2016, 07:51 PM #3

Inspect the MSI afterburner and attempt to repair the GeForce control panel by uninstalling and reinstalling it. If the GPU is damaged, the PC won’t display anything. Also verify the drivers. A 10 MHz clock discrepancy shouldn’t significantly affect performance; maintaining 240 should be sufficient if the issue can be resolved first.