F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Please assist in boosting the performance of "Gainward Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080Ti Phoenix GS 11GB"

Please assist in boosting the performance of "Gainward Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080Ti Phoenix GS 11GB"

Please assist in boosting the performance of "Gainward Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080Ti Phoenix GS 11GB"

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vincentnele
Member
223
02-05-2018, 08:51 AM
#1
Hi,
I'm checking if overclocking "Gainward Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080Ti Phoenix GS 11GB" with MSI Afterburner is possible. Would it work without using the OC tool from Gainward? I prefer Afterburner for my display setup and want to avoid installing many programs long-term. Do you think this approach makes sense? Also, how does it compare to Gainward's tool in terms of performance? Please let me know.

Best regards, Sunface
V
vincentnele
02-05-2018, 08:51 AM #1

Hi,
I'm checking if overclocking "Gainward Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080Ti Phoenix GS 11GB" with MSI Afterburner is possible. Would it work without using the OC tool from Gainward? I prefer Afterburner for my display setup and want to avoid installing many programs long-term. Do you think this approach makes sense? Also, how does it compare to Gainward's tool in terms of performance? Please let me know.

Best regards, Sunface

F
FozMac
Member
97
02-06-2018, 11:33 PM
#2
Are there any available thermal headroom options?
F
FozMac
02-06-2018, 11:33 PM #2

Are there any available thermal headroom options?

L
lulucool06
Junior Member
20
02-08-2018, 01:12 AM
#3
The optimal method involves stress testing using the game Control. Apply the highest settings at 4k resolution, enable full DXR, and utilize DLSS. Watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AkQ9xRPUaZg
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lulucool06
02-08-2018, 01:12 AM #3

The optimal method involves stress testing using the game Control. Apply the highest settings at 4k resolution, enable full DXR, and utilize DLSS. Watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AkQ9xRPUaZg

O
Ochoram
Junior Member
5
02-08-2018, 01:26 AM
#4
No water cooling is used, and overclocking isn't necessary without it.
O
Ochoram
02-08-2018, 01:26 AM #4

No water cooling is used, and overclocking isn't necessary without it.

R
RobertPlayzMC
Member
54
02-08-2018, 09:34 AM
#5
The card will perform better thanks to improved temperatures and stable water cooling, keeping the temperature low. It usually stays within the high core frequency range. You can also increase the voltage on the GPU without risking overheating. Whether the extra performance is worth it depends on your budget.

Using two 2080 Ti or 2080 cards will likely need water cooling to prevent both from overheating and running too hot. The top card also has limited space since the lower card blocks airflow, causing heat to circulate.

I previously used a crossfire setup with two 290x cards, but the top one failed because it became 10-20°C hotter than the bottom one.
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RobertPlayzMC
02-08-2018, 09:34 AM #5

The card will perform better thanks to improved temperatures and stable water cooling, keeping the temperature low. It usually stays within the high core frequency range. You can also increase the voltage on the GPU without risking overheating. Whether the extra performance is worth it depends on your budget.

Using two 2080 Ti or 2080 cards will likely need water cooling to prevent both from overheating and running too hot. The top card also has limited space since the lower card blocks airflow, causing heat to circulate.

I previously used a crossfire setup with two 290x cards, but the top one failed because it became 10-20°C hotter than the bottom one.

D
dhawk3000
Junior Member
12
02-12-2018, 03:57 AM
#6
I would not bother.
You have a top end card and I doubt that you would observe any significant benefit from overclocking.
Your card is a Golden Sample card that has already been factory overclocked.
You might get a touch more, but perhaps not.
D
dhawk3000
02-12-2018, 03:57 AM #6

I would not bother.
You have a top end card and I doubt that you would observe any significant benefit from overclocking.
Your card is a Golden Sample card that has already been factory overclocked.
You might get a touch more, but perhaps not.

S
SLADE_Arcant
Member
129
02-12-2018, 09:29 AM
#7
No, I was inquiring about the temperatures your GPU was experiencing while playing games.
The GPU has a maximum temperature threshold of 84°C. If it was already near that point, overclocking would likely cause it to reach that limit.
You can definitely overclock in air, but because of Nvidia's temperature-sensitive GPU Boost algorithm, the boost levels depend on available power and thermal capacity.
If the card was already warm, attempting an OC would offer little advantage.
S
SLADE_Arcant
02-12-2018, 09:29 AM #7

No, I was inquiring about the temperatures your GPU was experiencing while playing games.
The GPU has a maximum temperature threshold of 84°C. If it was already near that point, overclocking would likely cause it to reach that limit.
You can definitely overclock in air, but because of Nvidia's temperature-sensitive GPU Boost algorithm, the boost levels depend on available power and thermal capacity.
If the card was already warm, attempting an OC would offer little advantage.

I
IkBenHetBram
Senior Member
735
02-12-2018, 10:17 AM
#8
The main problem with RTX cards is achieving stable RT/tensor cores. Control is the most effective stress test—DLSS works as a shader, not a tensor. Overclocking usually succeeds in Control but fails in other games. You might stay stable at +65 to +80 cores for most titles, but will freeze in Control with anything above +40. The same applies to RAM; Metro Exodus and Control are ideal for pushing vRAM overclocks. Your overclock will become unstable in Control well before thermal problems appear.
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IkBenHetBram
02-12-2018, 10:17 AM #8

The main problem with RTX cards is achieving stable RT/tensor cores. Control is the most effective stress test—DLSS works as a shader, not a tensor. Overclocking usually succeeds in Control but fails in other games. You might stay stable at +65 to +80 cores for most titles, but will freeze in Control with anything above +40. The same applies to RAM; Metro Exodus and Control are ideal for pushing vRAM overclocks. Your overclock will become unstable in Control well before thermal problems appear.

A
AdamPlayzxXMc
Member
52
02-12-2018, 10:56 AM
#9
I also believe I don't overclock much. Your points seem reasonable.
Perhaps I'll invest in a water cooling solution.
For now, the performance is still adequate.
Thanks.
A
AdamPlayzxXMc
02-12-2018, 10:56 AM #9

I also believe I don't overclock much. Your points seem reasonable.
Perhaps I'll invest in a water cooling solution.
For now, the performance is still adequate.
Thanks.

M
MichishigeKun
Member
58
02-13-2018, 01:34 AM
#10
Greets form Germany.
😀
M
MichishigeKun
02-13-2018, 01:34 AM #10

Greets form Germany.
😀

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