F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking s about ASUS R9 390x with 4GB overclocking

s about ASUS R9 390x with 4GB overclocking

s about ASUS R9 390x with 4GB overclocking

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UnPetitPoney_
Member
70
11-11-2016, 10:00 AM
#1
Hello everyone!
I just upgraded my GPU with the recommended GPU Tweak II software.
I adjusted the following settings:
-GPU clock from 990mhz to 1070mhz
-GPU voltage from 1200mV to 1250mV
-Memory clock from 1425mhz to 1500mhz
-Fan speed increased by 26%
-And the power target raised from 100% to 120%
Is this safe? I’m still experiencing high temperatures of around 74°C in intense games for long periods, but it doesn’t crash.
Also, can I try increasing other values to boost performance further?
Thanks!
U
UnPetitPoney_
11-11-2016, 10:00 AM #1

Hello everyone!
I just upgraded my GPU with the recommended GPU Tweak II software.
I adjusted the following settings:
-GPU clock from 990mhz to 1070mhz
-GPU voltage from 1200mV to 1250mV
-Memory clock from 1425mhz to 1500mhz
-Fan speed increased by 26%
-And the power target raised from 100% to 120%
Is this safe? I’m still experiencing high temperatures of around 74°C in intense games for long periods, but it doesn’t crash.
Also, can I try increasing other values to boost performance further?
Thanks!

A
a1ex2410
Member
56
11-11-2016, 12:38 PM
#2
I own an R9 380 4gb with a 1100mhz core clock (originally 990mhz), a memory clock of 1425mhz, operating between 55C and 70C at 50% fan speed—providing a great balance of sound and performance for my R9 380 4gb G1 Gigabyte. It rarely crashes and has been running this overclocked setup for five months without any issues. If it doesn’t crash, it handles high temperatures well; everything seems fine as expected. Both the R9 380 and 390 models tend to run very hot, which is typical for them, so there’s no need to worry—they were designed that way.
A
a1ex2410
11-11-2016, 12:38 PM #2

I own an R9 380 4gb with a 1100mhz core clock (originally 990mhz), a memory clock of 1425mhz, operating between 55C and 70C at 50% fan speed—providing a great balance of sound and performance for my R9 380 4gb G1 Gigabyte. It rarely crashes and has been running this overclocked setup for five months without any issues. If it doesn’t crash, it handles high temperatures well; everything seems fine as expected. Both the R9 380 and 390 models tend to run very hot, which is typical for them, so there’s no need to worry—they were designed that way.

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martixcunha04
Member
51
11-17-2016, 07:16 PM
#3
I own an R9 380 4gb with a 1100mhz core clock (originally 990mhz), a memory clock of 1425mhz, operating between 55C and 70C at 50% fan speed—providing a great balance of sound and performance for my R9 380 4gb G1 Gigabyte. It rarely crashes and has been running this overclocked setup for five months without any issues. If it doesn’t crash, it handles high temperatures well; everything seems fine as expected. Both the R9 380 and 390 models tend to run very hot, which is typical for them, so there’s no cause for concern—they were designed that way.
M
martixcunha04
11-17-2016, 07:16 PM #3

I own an R9 380 4gb with a 1100mhz core clock (originally 990mhz), a memory clock of 1425mhz, operating between 55C and 70C at 50% fan speed—providing a great balance of sound and performance for my R9 380 4gb G1 Gigabyte. It rarely crashes and has been running this overclocked setup for five months without any issues. If it doesn’t crash, it handles high temperatures well; everything seems fine as expected. Both the R9 380 and 390 models tend to run very hot, which is typical for them, so there’s no cause for concern—they were designed that way.

X
XxKripxDeMoNxX
Senior Member
536
11-28-2016, 06:33 PM
#4
That's great, the temperatures were pretty good. I was just playing Shadow of War, and the temperature was 75, though I hope it isn't too high. Also, what do you mean by 50% fan curvature? I thought it should increase somewhere, but I'm not sure where to set it to start or where to boost further than 50%. Sorry, my English isn't great.
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XxKripxDeMoNxX
11-28-2016, 06:33 PM #4

That's great, the temperatures were pretty good. I was just playing Shadow of War, and the temperature was 75, though I hope it isn't too high. Also, what do you mean by 50% fan curvature? I thought it should increase somewhere, but I'm not sure where to set it to start or where to boost further than 50%. Sorry, my English isn't great.

3
333LegenD333
Junior Member
46
11-30-2016, 06:05 AM
#5
when i run nfs heat i often adjust the settings to HIGH/On. It reaches 84°C during gameplay in the garage because that’s when the GPU is under the most stress. When I let it cool down it drops to 65-70°C. I play at 1920x1200 resolution. It’s a pretty powerful GPU for a 5-year-old one.
3
333LegenD333
11-30-2016, 06:05 AM #5

when i run nfs heat i often adjust the settings to HIGH/On. It reaches 84°C during gameplay in the garage because that’s when the GPU is under the most stress. When I let it cool down it drops to 65-70°C. I play at 1920x1200 resolution. It’s a pretty powerful GPU for a 5-year-old one.

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Qdrees34
Junior Member
33
11-30-2016, 02:22 PM
#6
Sure, I understand. I was just puzzled by the noise—it becomes quite loud at 2300 RPM, isn't it? That's a bit unusual.
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Qdrees34
11-30-2016, 02:22 PM #6

Sure, I understand. I was just puzzled by the noise—it becomes quite loud at 2300 RPM, isn't it? That's a bit unusual.