F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Hey everyone, I own an ASUS GTX 1050 Ti OC Edition Cerberus.

Hey everyone, I own an ASUS GTX 1050 Ti OC Edition Cerberus.

Hey everyone, I own an ASUS GTX 1050 Ti OC Edition Cerberus.

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Creeperson3rd
Member
81
12-08-2016, 02:14 PM
#1
Hello guys, i was just checking if using oc mode for the mu gtx app is safe. I usually keep it in oc instead of gaming mode, so is it okay?
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Creeperson3rd
12-08-2016, 02:14 PM #1

Hello guys, i was just checking if using oc mode for the mu gtx app is safe. I usually keep it in oc instead of gaming mode, so is it okay?

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TransHailey
Member
57
12-15-2016, 07:50 AM
#2
It generally boosts the Core to 50MHz and memory might be similar. Overclocking the Core beyond this point could cause crashes in games. Raising the voltage is the only way to damage GPU or other parts. So yes, it works. You can usually manually reach around 1911Mhz (some hit 2000Mhz) and possibly 700Mhz (or up to 4504Mhz on memory depending on brand like Hynix or Samsung) without stability problems using MSI Afterburner.
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TransHailey
12-15-2016, 07:50 AM #2

It generally boosts the Core to 50MHz and memory might be similar. Overclocking the Core beyond this point could cause crashes in games. Raising the voltage is the only way to damage GPU or other parts. So yes, it works. You can usually manually reach around 1911Mhz (some hit 2000Mhz) and possibly 700Mhz (or up to 4504Mhz on memory depending on brand like Hynix or Samsung) without stability problems using MSI Afterburner.

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Anskar
Member
59
12-15-2016, 01:53 PM
#3
It generally boosts the Core to 50MHz and memory might be similar. Overclocking the Core beyond this point could cause crashes in games. Raising the voltage is the only way to damage GPU or other parts. So yes, it works. You can usually manually reach around 1911Mhz (some hit 2000Mhz) and possibly 700Mhz (or up to 4504Mhz on memory depending on brand like Hynix or Samsung) without stability problems using MSI Afterburner.
A
Anskar
12-15-2016, 01:53 PM #3

It generally boosts the Core to 50MHz and memory might be similar. Overclocking the Core beyond this point could cause crashes in games. Raising the voltage is the only way to damage GPU or other parts. So yes, it works. You can usually manually reach around 1911Mhz (some hit 2000Mhz) and possibly 700Mhz (or up to 4504Mhz on memory depending on brand like Hynix or Samsung) without stability problems using MSI Afterburner.