F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking overclocking rx 570 gddr5

overclocking rx 570 gddr5

overclocking rx 570 gddr5

L
Lord_Foxtrot
Senior Member
408
08-19-2017, 11:57 PM
#1
I recently purchased a used RX 570 and was trying to overclock it using an AMD Watt Man tool. I reached a maximum of 2050 MHz on the memory, but my default GDDR voltage is set at 0.900 mV. I wanted to push it higher to achieve stable speeds around 2130 MHz. I didn’t go any further because I’m unsure about the safe voltage for Samsung GDDR5 memory. Does anyone know the maximum safe voltage for a Gigabyte RX 570?
L
Lord_Foxtrot
08-19-2017, 11:57 PM #1

I recently purchased a used RX 570 and was trying to overclock it using an AMD Watt Man tool. I reached a maximum of 2050 MHz on the memory, but my default GDDR voltage is set at 0.900 mV. I wanted to push it higher to achieve stable speeds around 2130 MHz. I didn’t go any further because I’m unsure about the safe voltage for Samsung GDDR5 memory. Does anyone know the maximum safe voltage for a Gigabyte RX 570?

T
thowells4
Junior Member
36
08-20-2017, 08:14 AM
#2
There might be some voltage adjustments possible via standard overclocking methods (like Afterburner), but they are generally limited. It's important to note that you're not altering the main GDDR5 voltage, only the controller voltage on the GPU. This should work regardless of the specific brand used.
T
thowells4
08-20-2017, 08:14 AM #2

There might be some voltage adjustments possible via standard overclocking methods (like Afterburner), but they are generally limited. It's important to note that you're not altering the main GDDR5 voltage, only the controller voltage on the GPU. This should work regardless of the specific brand used.

A
220
08-20-2017, 08:56 AM
#3
Does your system match the specifications listed below?
A
AssassinJayden
08-20-2017, 08:56 AM #3

Does your system match the specifications listed below?

B
brobear7
Posting Freak
892
08-27-2017, 06:38 PM
#4
theappguy :
Are you using a system matching the specifications listed below?
Intel® Core™ i7-4770K @ 4.2GHz | EVO 212 Cooler Master | AMD RX570 4GB G1 Mi1.1 | Asus Maximus VI Hero | 2x8GB DDR3 @ 2133mhz | Kingston SUV500 240GBx2 SSD | 1x1TB SATA2
No, it's PH67A-D3-B3 / i7 3770 / 1x500 gb WD blue +1x500 Seagate / 2x4 1866 kingston DDR3 7-8-9-24
B
brobear7
08-27-2017, 06:38 PM #4

theappguy :
Are you using a system matching the specifications listed below?
Intel® Core™ i7-4770K @ 4.2GHz | EVO 212 Cooler Master | AMD RX570 4GB G1 Mi1.1 | Asus Maximus VI Hero | 2x8GB DDR3 @ 2133mhz | Kingston SUV500 240GBx2 SSD | 1x1TB SATA2
No, it's PH67A-D3-B3 / i7 3770 / 1x500 gb WD blue +1x500 Seagate / 2x4 1866 kingston DDR3 7-8-9-24

J
Jakobkrax
Member
189
09-03-2017, 10:52 PM
#5
Your RX480 runs at 2000MHz with 975mV VRAM. What actual speed gains do you see from the 20% VRAM upgrade?
J
Jakobkrax
09-03-2017, 10:52 PM #5

Your RX480 runs at 2000MHz with 975mV VRAM. What actual speed gains do you see from the 20% VRAM upgrade?

S
summitlb
Member
61
09-04-2017, 03:57 AM
#6
There might be some voltage adjustments possible via standard overclocking methods (like Afterburner), but they are generally limited. It's important to note that you're not altering the main GDDR5 voltage, only the controller voltage on the GPU. This should work regardless of the specific brand used.
S
summitlb
09-04-2017, 03:57 AM #6

There might be some voltage adjustments possible via standard overclocking methods (like Afterburner), but they are generally limited. It's important to note that you're not altering the main GDDR5 voltage, only the controller voltage on the GPU. This should work regardless of the specific brand used.