F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Zotac 1050 ti 4gb OC

Zotac 1050 ti 4gb OC

Zotac 1050 ti 4gb OC

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taconiebre
Senior Member
506
12-18-2017, 03:12 AM
#1
I understand i'm running behind on that trend, but I'm trying a 1050 Ti 4GB OC from Zotac at 1506MHz. I wish I had more knowledge about overclocking that GPU. It's currently running under a Ryzen 5 1400 Overclocked at 3.9GHz (1.35v) with two 8GB Ballistix 2400 GPUs. The MOBO is a MSI MORTAR B350. What are your thoughts?

What's the optimal configuration I can set up? Should I consider getting a 1060 6GB mini from Zotac? (or is it still possible to squeeze more performance out of this GPU?)

Don't worry about wasted time or troubles—this is eating into my productivity...hertz by hertz.
T
taconiebre
12-18-2017, 03:12 AM #1

I understand i'm running behind on that trend, but I'm trying a 1050 Ti 4GB OC from Zotac at 1506MHz. I wish I had more knowledge about overclocking that GPU. It's currently running under a Ryzen 5 1400 Overclocked at 3.9GHz (1.35v) with two 8GB Ballistix 2400 GPUs. The MOBO is a MSI MORTAR B350. What are your thoughts?

What's the optimal configuration I can set up? Should I consider getting a 1060 6GB mini from Zotac? (or is it still possible to squeeze more performance out of this GPU?)

Don't worry about wasted time or troubles—this is eating into my productivity...hertz by hertz.

C
ColdVictory
Junior Member
17
12-18-2017, 04:55 AM
#2
the 1050ti is a solid card and i've used them both. the 1060 lets you boost the 1080p settings and keep them stable better, though you don't need to update right now—just wait for new releases. when it comes to overclocking each card, they all behave differently. with my 1050ti, i was getting +175 on core clock and +350 on base clock without any problems. i'd start lower and check for stability issues, then gradually increase by +15mhz bumps until you notice a problem, after which you can reduce it slightly.
C
ColdVictory
12-18-2017, 04:55 AM #2

the 1050ti is a solid card and i've used them both. the 1060 lets you boost the 1080p settings and keep them stable better, though you don't need to update right now—just wait for new releases. when it comes to overclocking each card, they all behave differently. with my 1050ti, i was getting +175 on core clock and +350 on base clock without any problems. i'd start lower and check for stability issues, then gradually increase by +15mhz bumps until you notice a problem, after which you can reduce it slightly.

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woutvanbruggen
Junior Member
30
12-19-2017, 11:43 PM
#3
the 1050ti is a solid card and i've used them both. the 1060 lets you boost the 1080p settings and keep them stable better, though you don't need to update right now—just wait for the next releases. when it comes to overclocking each card, they all behave differently. with my 1050ti, i was getting +175 on core clock and +350 on base clock without any problems. i'd start lower and check for stability issues, then gradually increase by +15mhz bumps until you notice a problem, after which you can reduce it slightly.
W
woutvanbruggen
12-19-2017, 11:43 PM #3

the 1050ti is a solid card and i've used them both. the 1060 lets you boost the 1080p settings and keep them stable better, though you don't need to update right now—just wait for the next releases. when it comes to overclocking each card, they all behave differently. with my 1050ti, i was getting +175 on core clock and +350 on base clock without any problems. i'd start lower and check for stability issues, then gradually increase by +15mhz bumps until you notice a problem, after which you can reduce it slightly.