To how much extend i can over clock my gpu ?

Jul 24, 2017
108
0
10,680
i want to play games at some more frame rates so i decided to over clock my Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1050 ti WindForce oc g1 gaming.
To how much can the stock cooling fans support the overclock and i want that it should be stable also , so please some one help me out !!!!.
And can u explain me how to hyper thread my pentium G4560.
 
Solution
Your Pentium is already hyper threaded. There is nothing you need to do to it.

Your 1050ti is already overclocked from the factory. You will probably be able to squeeze a few more MHz on the clock, but don't expect a miracle.

Run a bench in Unigine Heaven for a baseline, record your score. Then download EVGA Precision X or MSI afterburner. In 5 - 10 increments bump up your core clock in Precision X or Afterburner while heaven in running in window mode. Watch your GPU temps and make sure they stay below 85. You can adjust your fan curve there as well for additional cooling. Your system will crash after you reach a certain point from adding 5 - 10mhz to your core clock. When you system crashes, you went to high and will need...
Your Pentium is already hyper threaded. There is nothing you need to do to it.

Your 1050ti is already overclocked from the factory. You will probably be able to squeeze a few more MHz on the clock, but don't expect a miracle.

Run a bench in Unigine Heaven for a baseline, record your score. Then download EVGA Precision X or MSI afterburner. In 5 - 10 increments bump up your core clock in Precision X or Afterburner while heaven in running in window mode. Watch your GPU temps and make sure they stay below 85. You can adjust your fan curve there as well for additional cooling. Your system will crash after you reach a certain point from adding 5 - 10mhz to your core clock. When you system crashes, you went to high and will need to back down.

From there you can change your Power to 120% to get some more room or increase your voltage. Personally, I do not increase the voltage as I have heard pascal can be damaged by increasing the voltage over the long term.

Then do the same thing with your memory clocks. The memory clock will go higher than the core clocks. Look for artifacts while running the benchmark. If you see things that don't belong, drop your memory down, you are at the max.

After it is stable, run the heaven benchmark and again and compare your results from you baseline.
 
Solution

TRENDING THREADS