F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Is this a significant overclock for the 1050Ti?

Is this a significant overclock for the 1050Ti?

Is this a significant overclock for the 1050Ti?

F
Freakiki
Member
72
12-14-2016, 02:45 PM
#1
I was able to push my 1050Ti Gaming X Core to 1961MHz with a boost to 1971, and the RAM is at 4503MHz. I'm not sure if I went too far, but it's working fine.
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Freakiki
12-14-2016, 02:45 PM #1

I was able to push my 1050Ti Gaming X Core to 1961MHz with a boost to 1971, and the RAM is at 4503MHz. I'm not sure if I went too far, but it's working fine.

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Foreverkim
Member
103
12-14-2016, 07:23 PM
#2
I'm not sure how to reach 1.2v, maybe that's the card limit. You've got everything boosted and you have some solid clocks, so go for it.
You might try searching online for options to raise voltage further using the BIOS with your cards. I can do that with power settings, but I'm not sure about adjusting BIOS for gfx cards—I haven't needed that before.
In any case, thanks for the clocks and good luck!
F
Foreverkim
12-14-2016, 07:23 PM #2

I'm not sure how to reach 1.2v, maybe that's the card limit. You've got everything boosted and you have some solid clocks, so go for it.
You might try searching online for options to raise voltage further using the BIOS with your cards. I can do that with power settings, but I'm not sure about adjusting BIOS for gfx cards—I haven't needed that before.
In any case, thanks for the clocks and good luck!

D
DeaglePower33
Junior Member
6
12-16-2016, 06:14 AM
#3
No stress tests were performed.
D
DeaglePower33
12-16-2016, 06:14 AM #3

No stress tests were performed.

Y
ylyes4
Senior Member
572
01-04-2017, 05:21 PM
#4
You were actually asked to say "Jesus Christ!" out loud. Have you tried any stress tests like Unigine, AIDA64 or 3DMark? I ran Unigine Valley twice and it seems okay. I plan to use a 1970-1980MHz processor. Can you help me find where to compare my results? Also, the issue I notice is that when setting the curve, the voltage doesn't reach 1.2V so I can only go up to 2GHz but get stuck between 1100mV and 1125mV.
Y
ylyes4
01-04-2017, 05:21 PM #4

You were actually asked to say "Jesus Christ!" out loud. Have you tried any stress tests like Unigine, AIDA64 or 3DMark? I ran Unigine Valley twice and it seems okay. I plan to use a 1970-1980MHz processor. Can you help me find where to compare my results? Also, the issue I notice is that when setting the curve, the voltage doesn't reach 1.2V so I can only go up to 2GHz but get stuck between 1100mV and 1125mV.

R
Rodeen
Member
130
01-09-2017, 09:31 AM
#5
The issue with using that core voltage is that it can wear out your card more quickly. Gradually lower the core voltage and perform a stress test until you notice artifacts (though ideally this should be the opposite). Keep in mind, you want the highest overclock performance with the least voltage possible.
R
Rodeen
01-09-2017, 09:31 AM #5

The issue with using that core voltage is that it can wear out your card more quickly. Gradually lower the core voltage and perform a stress test until you notice artifacts (though ideally this should be the opposite). Keep in mind, you want the highest overclock performance with the least voltage possible.

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Fokeiiz
Member
191
01-13-2017, 01:14 PM
#6
The issue with using that core voltage is that it can cause faster degradation of the card. Lower the core voltage gradually and perform a stress test until you see artifacts (though this should be the opposite, but okay). Remember, you want the highest overclock performance with the least voltage. Run an AIDA64 test with CPU, FPU, Cache, System Memory, and GPU selected for about an hour. I’m not concerned about card degradation since I have a replacement. My main limit for overclocking this GPU is that the core voltage would stay around 1.1-1.125mV if I could achieve 1.2V and reach Boost around 2GHz—that would be great. This card also has TwinFrozr II, so overheating isn’t a problem.
F
Fokeiiz
01-13-2017, 01:14 PM #6

The issue with using that core voltage is that it can cause faster degradation of the card. Lower the core voltage gradually and perform a stress test until you see artifacts (though this should be the opposite, but okay). Remember, you want the highest overclock performance with the least voltage. Run an AIDA64 test with CPU, FPU, Cache, System Memory, and GPU selected for about an hour. I’m not concerned about card degradation since I have a replacement. My main limit for overclocking this GPU is that the core voltage would stay around 1.1-1.125mV if I could achieve 1.2V and reach Boost around 2GHz—that would be great. This card also has TwinFrozr II, so overheating isn’t a problem.

M
MJShadow_
Junior Member
48
01-21-2017, 11:53 AM
#7
I'm not sure how to reach 1.2v, maybe that's the card limit. You've got everything boosted and you have some solid clocks, so go for it.
You might try searching online for options to raise voltage further using the BIOS with your cards. I can do that with power settings, but I'm not sure about adjusting BIOS for gfx cards—I haven't needed that before.
In any case, thanks for the clocks and good luck!
M
MJShadow_
01-21-2017, 11:53 AM #7

I'm not sure how to reach 1.2v, maybe that's the card limit. You've got everything boosted and you have some solid clocks, so go for it.
You might try searching online for options to raise voltage further using the BIOS with your cards. I can do that with power settings, but I'm not sure about adjusting BIOS for gfx cards—I haven't needed that before.
In any case, thanks for the clocks and good luck!