F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Is the GTX 970 Overclocked Secure?

Is the GTX 970 Overclocked Secure?

Is the GTX 970 Overclocked Secure?

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Kamikaze_007
Senior Member
625
04-05-2016, 07:39 PM
#1
I've been using a GTX 970 for roughly a month and chose to overclock it. This is my first attempt, so I wanted to be cautious and kept things safe. Is the overclock at least 90% safe? Also, I didn't adjust the power limit or core voltage since I've heard those can cause damage.
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Kamikaze_007
04-05-2016, 07:39 PM #1

I've been using a GTX 970 for roughly a month and chose to overclock it. This is my first attempt, so I wanted to be cautious and kept things safe. Is the overclock at least 90% safe? Also, I didn't adjust the power limit or core voltage since I've heard those can cause damage.

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__Jenna_453__
Member
57
04-05-2016, 09:28 PM
#2
It mainly depends on temperature. Increase the overclock and run Unigine Valley for 5-10 minutes to check your maximum temperatures. Aim to keep your card below 80°C. If it gets too hot, reduce the overclock or modify your fan settings.
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__Jenna_453__
04-05-2016, 09:28 PM #2

It mainly depends on temperature. Increase the overclock and run Unigine Valley for 5-10 minutes to check your maximum temperatures. Aim to keep your card below 80°C. If it gets too hot, reduce the overclock or modify your fan settings.

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Zologa19
Member
65
04-05-2016, 10:24 PM
#3
It mainly depends on temperature. Increase the overclock and run Unigine Valley for 5-10 minutes to check your maximum temperatures. Aim to keep your card below 80°C. If it gets too hot, reduce the overclock or modify your fan settings.
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Zologa19
04-05-2016, 10:24 PM #3

It mainly depends on temperature. Increase the overclock and run Unigine Valley for 5-10 minutes to check your maximum temperatures. Aim to keep your card below 80°C. If it gets too hot, reduce the overclock or modify your fan settings.

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TheWarlord23
Member
194
04-07-2016, 04:00 PM
#4
TJ Hooker:
The main factor is temperature. Increase the overclock and run the Unigine Valley benchmark for a short period (5-10 minutes) to check your maximum temperatures. Ideally, you should keep your card below 80°C. You can reduce the overclock or modify your fan settings if it becomes too hot.
Ok, my readings stayed around 56°C on 3D Mark, is Valley more suitable for testing?
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TheWarlord23
04-07-2016, 04:00 PM #4

TJ Hooker:
The main factor is temperature. Increase the overclock and run the Unigine Valley benchmark for a short period (5-10 minutes) to check your maximum temperatures. Ideally, you should keep your card below 80°C. You can reduce the overclock or modify your fan settings if it becomes too hot.
Ok, my readings stayed around 56°C on 3D Mark, is Valley more suitable for testing?

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Quirky_Q
Junior Member
25
04-08-2016, 10:08 AM
#5
3DMark scores are relatively brief, which helps prevent your graphics card from overheating during long gaming sessions. Valley is a good example—just let it run as needed to measure steady-state temperatures. Furmark represents the typical worst-case stress test, but I believe it’s excessive. The temperatures you observe with Valley are much closer to what you’d experience in everyday use.
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Quirky_Q
04-08-2016, 10:08 AM #5

3DMark scores are relatively brief, which helps prevent your graphics card from overheating during long gaming sessions. Valley is a good example—just let it run as needed to measure steady-state temperatures. Furmark represents the typical worst-case stress test, but I believe it’s excessive. The temperatures you observe with Valley are much closer to what you’d experience in everyday use.

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Kaisetsu
Senior Member
651
04-15-2016, 10:50 AM
#6
Many factors depend on your GPU's performance. Highly overclocked GPUs, like those from EVGA, offer the top quality chips for stability when pushed to their limits. My EVGA SSC 970s run at 1190MHz on the core and 1342MHz at boost, which is roughly 4% above the standard Nvidia 970 spec. I can push them even higher to 160MHz without changing the voltage, a 12% jump over the factory setting. Such performance isn’t typical for regular factory-standard cards.
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Kaisetsu
04-15-2016, 10:50 AM #6

Many factors depend on your GPU's performance. Highly overclocked GPUs, like those from EVGA, offer the top quality chips for stability when pushed to their limits. My EVGA SSC 970s run at 1190MHz on the core and 1342MHz at boost, which is roughly 4% above the standard Nvidia 970 spec. I can push them even higher to 160MHz without changing the voltage, a 12% jump over the factory setting. Such performance isn’t typical for regular factory-standard cards.

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matt72135
Junior Member
24
05-01-2016, 03:38 PM
#7
TJ Hooker explains that 3DMark tests are brief, so the graphics card doesn't overheat as much during extended gaming sessions. For longer runs, he suggests running Valley until steady state temperatures are reached. He also mentions using MSI Afterburner with max temps at 79 and auto fan control.
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matt72135
05-01-2016, 03:38 PM #7

TJ Hooker explains that 3DMark tests are brief, so the graphics card doesn't overheat as much during extended gaming sessions. For longer runs, he suggests running Valley until steady state temperatures are reached. He also mentions using MSI Afterburner with max temps at 79 and auto fan control.

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SamaMonster
Member
178
05-07-2016, 05:41 PM
#8
You should be safe as long as your temp limit is configured. I’m not very familiar with the temp limit in Afterburner, since I don’t think it’s available (maybe because I have an AMD card). Fans on auto should work fine.
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SamaMonster
05-07-2016, 05:41 PM #8

You should be safe as long as your temp limit is configured. I’m not very familiar with the temp limit in Afterburner, since I don’t think it’s available (maybe because I have an AMD card). Fans on auto should work fine.

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Bap56
Member
58
05-07-2016, 06:47 PM
#9
TJ Hooker:
You should be safe if the temp limit is set correctly. I'm not very familiar with the temp limit in Afterburner, since I don't have that setting (maybe because I use an AMD card). Fans on auto should work fine.
Thanks! Afterburner includes an MSI card but it works with everything, including AMD models like mine.
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Bap56
05-07-2016, 06:47 PM #9

TJ Hooker:
You should be safe if the temp limit is set correctly. I'm not very familiar with the temp limit in Afterburner, since I don't have that setting (maybe because I use an AMD card). Fans on auto should work fine.
Thanks! Afterburner includes an MSI card but it works with everything, including AMD models like mine.

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adricrono
Junior Member
48
05-07-2016, 08:12 PM
#10
You're very welcome.
Yeah, I use Afterburner myself, but I can't seem to figure out how/where to set the temperature limit.
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adricrono
05-07-2016, 08:12 PM #10

You're very welcome.
Yeah, I use Afterburner myself, but I can't seem to figure out how/where to set the temperature limit.

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