F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Overclocking Acer XF240H

Overclocking Acer XF240H

Overclocking Acer XF240H

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Papyrule
Senior Member
560
12-10-2017, 09:08 AM
#1
Hi, your XF240H has been with you for a while without overclocking, but it's worth considering if it could be beneficial. Overclocking this monitor does carry similar risks as overclocking a GPU or CPU. If others have tried to do so, let me know what they found. You're running it on a Vega 56, which adds another layer to the decision.
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Papyrule
12-10-2017, 09:08 AM #1

Hi, your XF240H has been with you for a while without overclocking, but it's worth considering if it could be beneficial. Overclocking this monitor does carry similar risks as overclocking a GPU or CPU. If others have tried to do so, let me know what they found. You're running it on a Vega 56, which adds another layer to the decision.

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xmen12
Junior Member
22
12-13-2017, 07:40 PM
#2
It functions like GPU/CPU, requiring effort to stress it (ensuring no artifacts appear). It's simpler if pushed beyond limits, as it will just reset. There are references to a monitor with 240Hz, though its native rate is 144Hz; you might occasionally see 165-170Hz, but it depends on the situation.
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xmen12
12-13-2017, 07:40 PM #2

It functions like GPU/CPU, requiring effort to stress it (ensuring no artifacts appear). It's simpler if pushed beyond limits, as it will just reset. There are references to a monitor with 240Hz, though its native rate is 144Hz; you might occasionally see 165-170Hz, but it depends on the situation.

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aidensara
Junior Member
42
01-03-2018, 10:26 PM
#3
It functions like GPU/CPU, requiring effort to stress it (ensuring no artifacts appear).
It's simpler if pushed beyond limits, as it will just reset.
There are references to a monitor with 240Hz, though its native rate is 144Hz; you might occasionally see 165-170Hz, but it depends on the setup.
A
aidensara
01-03-2018, 10:26 PM #3

It functions like GPU/CPU, requiring effort to stress it (ensuring no artifacts appear).
It's simpler if pushed beyond limits, as it will just reset.
There are references to a monitor with 240Hz, though its native rate is 144Hz; you might occasionally see 165-170Hz, but it depends on the setup.