F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Settings for MSI Afterburner on GPU overclocking

Settings for MSI Afterburner on GPU overclocking

Settings for MSI Afterburner on GPU overclocking

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Cherrie24
Member
179
09-03-2018, 04:15 PM
#1
-MOBO: z390 MSI Godlike
-CPU: i9 9900k Overclocked to 5Ghz 1.32V
G.Skill 2x16GB DDR4 TridentZ RGB 4400Mhz PC4-35200 CL 18 1.4V Dual Channel Kit (2x8GB) Overclocked to 4400Mhz 1.4V Should I reduce it or is this acceptable?
-GPU: MSI GAMING GeForce RTX 2080 Ti GDRR6 352-bit HDMI/DP/USB Ray Tracing Turing Architecture Graphics Card (RTX 2080 TI GAMING X TRIO)-Overclock Settings Core clock set to Curve. I’m not sure what memory clock to use. Reading another forum suggested 500, but it caused instability. Should I keep it at zero?
This is my first build and overclocking experience—Bios setup feels a bit confusing with so many options.
With this instability, where should I begin fine-tuning or adjusting?
Do you have any tips or resources to help achieve the best gaming performance with this configuration?
C
Cherrie24
09-03-2018, 04:15 PM #1

-MOBO: z390 MSI Godlike
-CPU: i9 9900k Overclocked to 5Ghz 1.32V
G.Skill 2x16GB DDR4 TridentZ RGB 4400Mhz PC4-35200 CL 18 1.4V Dual Channel Kit (2x8GB) Overclocked to 4400Mhz 1.4V Should I reduce it or is this acceptable?
-GPU: MSI GAMING GeForce RTX 2080 Ti GDRR6 352-bit HDMI/DP/USB Ray Tracing Turing Architecture Graphics Card (RTX 2080 TI GAMING X TRIO)-Overclock Settings Core clock set to Curve. I’m not sure what memory clock to use. Reading another forum suggested 500, but it caused instability. Should I keep it at zero?
This is my first build and overclocking experience—Bios setup feels a bit confusing with so many options.
With this instability, where should I begin fine-tuning or adjusting?
Do you have any tips or resources to help achieve the best gaming performance with this configuration?

G
Golinium12
Junior Member
40
09-03-2018, 05:16 PM
#2
CPU overclock appears acceptable as long as temperatures remain manageable.
It’s hard to comment on the memory since most users don’t push kits that quickly. Intel recommends a maximum of 1.5, so that should be fine.
It seems you’re adapting someone else’s performance numbers to your GPU setup, which isn’t the best approach. Try testing the GPU memory by gradually increasing settings from zero. Usually, I don’t use a curved setting for the GPU core; instead, I stick to an offset similar to what the memory supports. Just add to the expected maximum boost, but stop once instability appears and then reduce back.
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Golinium12
09-03-2018, 05:16 PM #2

CPU overclock appears acceptable as long as temperatures remain manageable.
It’s hard to comment on the memory since most users don’t push kits that quickly. Intel recommends a maximum of 1.5, so that should be fine.
It seems you’re adapting someone else’s performance numbers to your GPU setup, which isn’t the best approach. Try testing the GPU memory by gradually increasing settings from zero. Usually, I don’t use a curved setting for the GPU core; instead, I stick to an offset similar to what the memory supports. Just add to the expected maximum boost, but stop once instability appears and then reduce back.

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DeadlyZach
Junior Member
9
09-04-2018, 03:48 PM
#3
CPU overclock appears acceptable as long as temperatures remain manageable.
It’s hard to comment on the memory since most users don’t push kits that quickly. Intel recommends a maximum of 1.5, so that should be fine.
It seems you’re adapting someone else’s performance numbers to your GPU setup, which isn’t the best approach. Try testing the GPU memory by gradually increasing settings from zero. Usually, I don’t use a curved setting for the GPU core; instead, I stick to an offset similar to what the memory supports. Just add to the expected maximum boost, but stop once instability appears and then reduce back.
D
DeadlyZach
09-04-2018, 03:48 PM #3

CPU overclock appears acceptable as long as temperatures remain manageable.
It’s hard to comment on the memory since most users don’t push kits that quickly. Intel recommends a maximum of 1.5, so that should be fine.
It seems you’re adapting someone else’s performance numbers to your GPU setup, which isn’t the best approach. Try testing the GPU memory by gradually increasing settings from zero. Usually, I don’t use a curved setting for the GPU core; instead, I stick to an offset similar to what the memory supports. Just add to the expected maximum boost, but stop once instability appears and then reduce back.

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El_Raxii22
Junior Member
11
09-10-2018, 06:33 PM
#4
They don’t really require overclocking the 2080 Ti as long as you have enough voltage headroom and temperatures stay manageable.
My card lists a boost speed of 1755Mhz, but it often operates around 1900Mhz.
If I set the voltage to 124%, it could reach 2115Mhz with an additional 1700Mhz on the RAM.
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El_Raxii22
09-10-2018, 06:33 PM #4

They don’t really require overclocking the 2080 Ti as long as you have enough voltage headroom and temperatures stay manageable.
My card lists a boost speed of 1755Mhz, but it often operates around 1900Mhz.
If I set the voltage to 124%, it could reach 2115Mhz with an additional 1700Mhz on the RAM.

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PisulasRule
Senior Member
676
09-27-2018, 06:36 PM
#5
Times appear to remain near 71C. That feels elevated to me. Is this typical or should I strive for improved results?
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PisulasRule
09-27-2018, 06:36 PM #5

Times appear to remain near 71C. That feels elevated to me. Is this typical or should I strive for improved results?

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ElugeSlime
Junior Member
42
09-29-2018, 09:35 AM
#6
I returned to Bios and it restored my CPU voltage to the standard setting.
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ElugeSlime
09-29-2018, 09:35 AM #6

I returned to Bios and it restored my CPU voltage to the standard setting.