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The RX Vega 64 Owners Thread

Associate
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12 Sep 2017
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Had to send my vega 64 air in for an RMA. Crashes to black screen with extremely short odd loop sound in speakers, happens while playing games like pubg and dota.
 
Soldato
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pretty good Kaap. Did you try the memory at 1100mhz?

And 1700mhz on the core still pretty decent, I wouldn't call that a particularly poor overclocker. There seems to be a sweetspot and a balance to be found, it wouldn't surprise me over the next few days we see you post a 1750mhz bench. I've seen dozens of AIO users on other forums not even hit 1700mhz and remain stable.

To me reading around, it feels like if you have a Vega64 that can do 1700mhz and up, and remain at those clocks through benching or gaming, it would appear you have a pretty good card on your hands. I still think as these drivers come along, it will pull well clear of the 1080, it just feels like there is way more left in the tank.
 
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Man of Honour
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pretty good Kaap. Did you try the memory at 1100mhz? And 1700mhz on the core still pretty decent, I've seen dozens of AIO users on other forums not even hit 1700mhz and remain stable. I stick by what I've been saying, a Vega64 that can do 1700mhz and up, and remain at those clocks through benching or gaming, appears to be a pretty good performer. I still think as these drivers come along, it will pull well clear of the 1080.

It will only do 1100mhz when the card is still cold just after boot up.
 
Associate
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Sapphire AIO owner here.

Without adjusting any voltages I can get 1050MHz on my HBM and 1770MHz core whilst running a +50% power increase; this gives a timespy score of 7932, anything higher results in a black screen crash.

I'm a bit confused about what to do with the voltage. Do I undervolt to reduce temperatures which results in improved stability, or overvolt to increase stability but will obviously increase temperatures?
 
Associate
Joined
10 Aug 2017
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Sapphire AIO owner here.

Without adjusting any voltages I can get 1050MHz on my HBM and 1770MHz core whilst running a +50% power increase; this gives a timespy score of 7932, anything higher results in a black screen crash.

I'm a bit confused about what to do with the voltage. Do I undervolt to reduce temperatures which results in improved stability, or overvolt to increase stability but will obviously increase temperatures?
Core voltage and clock impacts the HBM so as you push higher clocks or more voltage it could force your HBM overclock to become unstable. IMO, get the HBM as high as you can then work on the core. It's possible that lowering the core clock or undervolting the core will help you achieve a higher stable HBM clock and improve performance. You'll need to find the balance then test.
 
Associate
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Core voltage and clock impacts the HBM so as you push higher clocks or more voltage it could force your HBM overclock to become unstable. IMO, get the HBM as high as you can then work on the core. It's possible that lowering the core clock or undervolting the core will help you achieve a higher stable HBM clock and improve performance. You'll need to find the balance then test.

Interesting, I'll have a go at seeing if I can push the memory higher if I leave the clock alone. I did read in a few places that there were more gains to be had overclocking the memory anyway.
 
Caporegime
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Sapphire AIO owner here.

Without adjusting any voltages I can get 1050MHz on my HBM and 1770MHz core whilst running a +50% power increase; this gives a timespy score of 7932, anything higher results in a black screen crash.

I'm a bit confused about what to do with the voltage. Do I undervolt to reduce temperatures which results in improved stability, or overvolt to increase stability but will obviously increase temperatures?
Core voltage and clock impacts the HBM so as you push higher clocks or more voltage it could force your HBM overclock to become unstable. IMO, get the HBM as high as you can then work on the core. It's possible that lowering the core clock or undervolting the core will help you achieve a higher stable HBM clock and improve performance. You'll need to find the balance then test.
Good advice this from Kundi. Two of my 64's top out at 1075Mhz, one does all the way up to 1100 but it artifacts. The other crashes past 1075Mhz. My best sample does 1100Mhz at stock voltage.

1250 voltage and the highest possible clock frequency in state 7 will get you the highest possible clocks, coupled with +50% power limit. State 6 should be around 50Mhz/0.050mv lower than state 7 for best results.
 
Soldato
Joined
30 Mar 2016
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2,884
Location
East Lothian
Sapphire AIO owner here.

Without adjusting any voltages I can get 1050MHz on my HBM and 1770MHz core whilst running a +50% power increase; this gives a timespy score of 7932, anything higher results in a black screen crash.

I'm a bit confused about what to do with the voltage. Do I undervolt to reduce temperatures which results in improved stability, or overvolt to increase stability but will obviously increase temperatures?
Temperature isn't is a big a factor with the AOI cards and can easily be kept away from the 70 degrees throttling limit by increasing the fan RPM. Unless you have the card under a custom water loop and are achieving temps below 50 I don't think there are any significant performance gains between the 55 and 65 your card is likely to mostly sit between at full load. As AMDMAtt said, pushing the voltage in state 7 a bit will allow you card to hit the highest boost clocks although you will likely see the clock frequency fluctuate quite a bit, for me this is usually between 1670 and 1730. Lowering the voltage and clock frequency allows for a more stable boost clock, I was able to achieve a more solid boost clock 'line' in the Wattman monitoring graph, staying much closer to 1700 although the actual performance between the higher voltage and clocks versus lower voltage were largely on a par. Actually I found that the previous drivers favoured the lower voltages more than 17.9.1. Here are the details of results I've achieved at various settings and drivers.

https://imgur.com/a/5KOgY

Going by my results, the drivers have so far provided an increase of 3.2% in performance - this is based on the Time Spy graphics score using the stock turbo profile; increasing from 7610 in the first drivers to 7853 in 17.9.1.
 
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Soldato
Joined
30 Mar 2016
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East Lothian
interesting kundi.

Here's that video anyway, got a good solid 1750mhz overclock now

Downloaded Battlefield 1 last night. Best performance for me was 1702/1150 and 1777/1200 on states 6 & 7 (power limit and memory are always +50% and 1080 for me now) - boost clock stayed fairly close to 1710.

Strangely, I left my PC on overnight last night to download the game and when I checked Wattman this morning, at some point during the night my max clock hit 1748 (never seen that high since 17.8.1 drivers) and the temp 68 - I wonder what it was doing?...
 
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