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Send it back.So my 9070 (Sapphire Pulse) frequently boosts beyond 3GHz, not just in the stress tests but in games too. I've cross checked the numbers with different monitors and they all agree.
I thought the boost clock was ~2.5GHz.
I'm running the stock clocks with a -75mV voltage offset and a 10% power limit increase.
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I think you can run tests in OCCT.how do you check for vram errors , i like this /memtest_vulkan v0.5.0 by GpuZelenograd but i dont think it always detects errors , what i try to do is i pause on a scene and follow when the fps start dropping
I wasn't complaining, I swear!!!Send it back.
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These cards have memory error correction/detection, so you need to monitor for errors, but also notable drops in performance. When you start seeing performance drops, you've pushed too hardhow do you check for vram errors , i like this /memtest_vulkan v0.5.0 by GpuZelenograd but i dont think it always detects errors , what i try to do is i pause on a scene and follow when the fps start dropping
They're cracking little over engineered cards.So my 9070 (Sapphire Pulse) frequently boosts beyond 3GHz, not just in the stress tests but in games too. I've cross checked the numbers with different monitors and they all agree.
I thought the boost clock was ~2.5GHz.
I'm running the stock clocks with a -75mV voltage offset and a 10% power limit increase.
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does it really matter, called having fun pushing a gpu like i have past 30yrs plus, games i tune for efficiency, totally different , cyberpunk atm is just -50mv 2800mhz fast timing -20 power core untouched , does me fine. so your comparing apples n oranges.so everyone is posting crazy results but none of these are stable , you can easily pass the benchmarks but try to do few different games session and you will get constant crashes
Mine has been stable so far, running Zero Dawn, Fallout London, and other games maxed out with some overclocks. I've probably logged at least 30 hours of gameplay without any issues.so everyone is posting crazy results but none of these are stable , you can easily pass the benchmarks but try to do few different games session and you will get constant crashes
No it's a really bad way to check stability, i could pass 3dmark with a 200mv undervolt but it wouldnt work in games. I'm saying I've used all the games I knew to make my 7900 XTX unstable to test my clocks to get the settings I scored in 3dmark. Clocks that aren't stable in games are pointless.
Seems like you really lost the silicon lottery with -45mv.
GM all
Any decent under bolting guides I can watch?
I fancy having a tinker this weekend
Ta
Legend! And this is all within the AMD software, no 3rd party tools needed, and thanks for the notes and time it took to write this!Are you aiming for efficiency or outright performance? Also make sure it runs stable at stock first.
Use the 3DMark demo on steam to get a baseline number to start measuring performance increase. More crucially it gives enough granularity to spot VRAM stability regression.
IMPORTANT: Do a test run between each change, this helps you track and undo for any instability.
Setting a core overclock has little to no effect.
1. Set your desired power limit. Plus 10% if looking outright performance and minus numbers if looking for reduced power draw and efficiency.
2. Find you max stable undervolt. Start at -50mV and keep dropping from there. When it is unstable you will get a driver crash. Then back off the undervolt by -10mV.
3. Once you find a stable undervolt, start overclocking the VRAM. Start with just setting “Fast Timings” and then start increasing the overclock by 100. Once you start seeing a drop in performance, you are seeing EDR (Error Detection and Replay). Back off the overclock by about 50 at this point and test again.
4. Once you have this baseline established, test loads of different and GPU demanding games. You will find that one of them may simply refuse to play ball with what seems like a stable overlock. At this point back off the undervolt and possibly the VRAM overclock until you are stable again.
Don’t be disappointed if you think you’ve lost some mythical “silicone lottery”. My experience the difference between winning and losing is actually margin of error in gaming performance. It just makes for nice benchmark scores.
Have fun![]()
Should be under Performance > Tuning iirc. Don't forget to save out your settings once happy.Legend! And this is all within the AMD software, no 3rd party tools needed, and thanks for the notes and time it took to write this!![]()
For me Neon Noir (1080P) and Heaven / Valley (1440P) were quick to show whether I'd undervolted too much.I find Steel Nomad is a good preliminary test. If you can get through 10 loops of that you're doing ok. But yeah the only way to know for sure is to test lots of games.
Legend! And this is all within the AMD software, no 3rd party tools needed, and thanks for the notes and time it took to write this!![]()