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Overclocking Gigabyte 5700xt

Overclocking Gigabyte 5700xt

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MrBrosco
Member
64
12-21-2019, 09:21 AM
#1
I recently completely upgraded my old computer and installed a powerful GPU. I connected it with a 1440p 144hz Samsung monitor, and I must say this gaming experience is entirely new to me. Before the upgrade, I wasn’t really into gaming because my old parts wouldn’t work well. Since then, I feel more confident about connecting CPUs, but I’m still finding it hard to understand GPU concepts. While playing at maximum settings, I noticed the junction temperature could rise quickly—up to 90-95°C—but this is easily fixed by increasing the fan curve. I managed to bring it down to 73-75°C and the card ran smoothly. Noise isn’t an issue since I’m using headphones. What I need help with is efficiently overclocking the GPU without any crashes. The Radeon software settings are currently:

GPU tuning: Px(FREQ/mV)-->P1(800/750), P2(1450/750), P3(2100/1066) – these were all the default values when I opened the tab, and I haven’t made any changes.
Vram tuning : 1750 mhz
Power tuning : 0%

Any advice?
M
MrBrosco
12-21-2019, 09:21 AM #1

I recently completely upgraded my old computer and installed a powerful GPU. I connected it with a 1440p 144hz Samsung monitor, and I must say this gaming experience is entirely new to me. Before the upgrade, I wasn’t really into gaming because my old parts wouldn’t work well. Since then, I feel more confident about connecting CPUs, but I’m still finding it hard to understand GPU concepts. While playing at maximum settings, I noticed the junction temperature could rise quickly—up to 90-95°C—but this is easily fixed by increasing the fan curve. I managed to bring it down to 73-75°C and the card ran smoothly. Noise isn’t an issue since I’m using headphones. What I need help with is efficiently overclocking the GPU without any crashes. The Radeon software settings are currently:

GPU tuning: Px(FREQ/mV)-->P1(800/750), P2(1450/750), P3(2100/1066) – these were all the default values when I opened the tab, and I haven’t made any changes.
Vram tuning : 1750 mhz
Power tuning : 0%

Any advice?

M
mccoop03
Posting Freak
910
12-21-2019, 07:09 PM
#2
Navi provides minimal potential gains from raising the boost clock, as it's frequently constrained by thermal or power limits in-game, often well below what's needed. Therefore, start with under-volting rather than overclocking, since under-volting aids cooling and reduces power consumption.
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mccoop03
12-21-2019, 07:09 PM #2

Navi provides minimal potential gains from raising the boost clock, as it's frequently constrained by thermal or power limits in-game, often well below what's needed. Therefore, start with under-volting rather than overclocking, since under-volting aids cooling and reduces power consumption.

C
Caribbean_Blue
Senior Member
609
01-01-2020, 06:28 PM
#3
Navi provides minimal potential gains from raising the boost clock, as it's frequently constrained by thermal or power limits in-game, often well below what's needed. Therefore, start with under-volting rather than overclocking, since under-volting aids cooling and reduces power consumption.
C
Caribbean_Blue
01-01-2020, 06:28 PM #3

Navi provides minimal potential gains from raising the boost clock, as it's frequently constrained by thermal or power limits in-game, often well below what's needed. Therefore, start with under-volting rather than overclocking, since under-volting aids cooling and reduces power consumption.