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My 1070 boosts to 1911MHz out the box and mostly holds it though wanders down 1-2 speed bins at times - slightly nudging the voltage it largely holds around 2100MHz but drops back to 202xMHz at times - actual performance gain averages about 5%.
I was under the impression 1898mhz is the highest bin available from stock. What is you card?
The 1911mhz bin exists at 1.093v which is higher than stock voltage.
1070/1080 do not overclock well anyway and I have had both. They hit ~1900MHz out of the box; when you OC to 2100MHz you do not even get 10% extra fps...
I've tested overclocks. Whilst it doesn't scale perfectly, it does scale reasonably.
1900mhz consistent boost on a reference car isn't likely. What you may be seeing is a result of factory OCd versions of the card which have power limits increased for you already over the reference version. That would be why you don't think it isn't scaling properly because it is boosting so high. Boost clocks is as much a function of power limits as it is actually setting higher clocks.
10%+ performance is easy to get on any Pascal card and should be pushing closer to 15% over reference for clocks.
My 1070 boosts to 1911MHz out the box and mostly holds it though wanders down 1-2 speed bins at times - slightly nudging the voltage it largely holds around 2100MHz but drops back to 202xMHz at times - actual performance gain averages about 5%.
Mine is the Palit Dual fan - its not the founders edition but its basically the stock card with a cheapy aftermarket cooler on it - kind of barrel scraping but I got it at a pretty decent discount as there is no way I'm paying nVidia the normal prices for what the 1070 is :s (I don't mind paying good money for cards but I'm not gonna be taken for a mug).
I believe this is 1.025 voltage bin BTW.
Well, none of these testimonials seems like 'an overclocker's dream' to me.
It seems to me that both companies are leaving less and less headroom there... Very little performance's being left on the table.
Well, none of these testimonials seems like 'an overclocker's dream' to me.
It seems to me that both companies are leaving less and less headroom there... Very little performance's being left on the table.
Well, none of these testimonials seems like 'an overclocker's dream' to me.
It seems to me that both companies are leaving less and less headroom there... Very little performance's being left on the table.
Definitely not stock then if that exists at a 1.025v bin. That would make sense why it boosts so high out of the box as it is far less likely to hit the power limit. The power limit may also have been increased.
I'm pretty certain now the max boost possible is 1898mhz at 1.062v for a stock card (GTX 1070 and GTX 1080).
He has a good point but nobody expected a 52% increase in single threaded performance from bulldozer to Ryzen.
Either way RX Vega will be interesting either a total disappointment or a magnificent card.
I do wonder, aren't AMD a little to calm with FE reviews. Seriously no significant attempt at damage control merely brushing it aside. There is an interesting storm coming.
Surely that's a good thing? Customers get max performance out of the box without messing with voltages, cooling, etc. Some people act as if it's taking away their elite overclockers status, when really it's just making it standard with less hassle.
I don't think there are any "good" options at this point - just make the one that seems least worst and hope for the bestI'm quite happy with my 1070 but I'm holding my money now waiting for something that is actually faster than the 1080ti before upgrading again.
Keep Calm and Hawaii On![]()
Use the 1070 and choose between volta or Navi when it comes out, seems Vega is going to take forever to arrive, in hardware and afterwards in software development. Unless you need higher performance then 1070 or wanted some special feature of the Vega. I expect it to take till September for most people wanting vega to get a suitable card, worse case is HBM2 shortage and even further out into autumn
It's always been a lottery if you get a good chip or not as far as overclocking goes but Nvidia have taken away some option's and made it a bit harder for those that want to push past the boundaries especially for those on water. No big deal to the likes of me and probably yourself as it's a benefit as i see it. Only need to look at the bench threads to see that there is not a real big variation on clocks like there used to be. Guess it takes a bit of the fun away.
But again, I think it's a good thing that you buy a card and you know what you're going to get. You're no longer relying on the silicon lottery because you're getting max clockspeed guaranteed from the manufacturer. I'd rather be using my card that endlessly tweaking it because I think there's some performance left on the table.
Well, none of these testimonials seems like 'an overclocker's dream' to me.
It seems to me that both companies are leaving less and less headroom there... Very little performance's being left on the table.
Therefore we could be about to see genuine multi GPU for the prosumer being a real thing.
I've tested overclocks. Whilst it doesn't scale perfectly, it does scale reasonably.
1900mhz consistent boost on a reference car isn't likely. What you may be seeing is a result of factory OCd versions of the card which have power limits increased for you already over the reference version. That would be why you don't think it isn't scaling properly because it is boosting so high. Boost clocks is as much a function of power limits as it is actually setting higher clocks.
10%+ performance is easy to get on any Pascal card and should be pushing closer to 15% over reference for clocks.
10% real performance gain is pretty good.
I can't remember there being much more room historically (Maxwell was good, that was about it). The main benefit in the past was that cards were also segmented by clock speed rather than just number of shaders (similar to CPUs now). This meant you could for example overclock certain X850 cards to X850XT PE cards, 6800 to 6800 Ultra etc..
That is if you are lucky to get 10%. Plus as I recall I would get a hell of a lot more than that on my 8800 GTS back in the day.
7950 got a lot more boost from OC then 10% did it not? At least if you was lucky with silicon anyway.