What is the best overclock settings for my system

Michael4c

Commendable
May 11, 2016
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I want to push my pc a bit more to play some of my fav games Because i don't got the money right now to get a new graphic card :( My pc is just a little under some game recommend like Mad max, maybe Rainbow six siege, Xcom2, etc to order to play on ultra graphics

PC SPECS:

Motherboard: msi z77a-g41
Cpu: i7-2600k
Cpu cooler: Soon be Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO RR-212E-20PK-R2 CPU Cooler with 120mm PWM Fan
Ram: DDR3 8gb of ram
PSU: Evga 500W
Graphic card: Nivida Geforce GTX 750 ti SC (with 1 fan)

I also got a problem with my gtx 750 for some reason it just don't wanna boost half of the time.

If you need me to list anything else that you might need tell me
 
Solution
You must be talking about EVGA PrecisionX. That allows you to overclock it manually. But overclocking is not a guarantee. The superclocked version is already factory overclocked, so you wont be able to get much from manually overclocking.

If you don't know how to overclock, you want to go in small increments until you find it unstable; and then back down to where it was stable and either run that, or increase in even smaller increments. Example:

+25MHz core clock;
Test;
if stable, +25Mhz;
Test;
if unstable, -25MHz;
Test,
if stable, +10MHz;
Test

and hopefully you get the idea. You won't be able to "boost" by very much. So if you want to do it, keep it to a minimum.

Michael4c

Commendable
May 11, 2016
53
0
1,640


Now my problem is with my 750 ti is when i try to boost it my pc like freezes or crash or the game will get 5 fps someone else said it could be my gpu core locking up from a high super clock
 

Michael4c

Commendable
May 11, 2016
53
0
1,640


It comes with a program in the disc to SuperClock it and everytime i tried to boost it even a little it just dont want to work
 
You must be talking about EVGA PrecisionX. That allows you to overclock it manually. But overclocking is not a guarantee. The superclocked version is already factory overclocked, so you wont be able to get much from manually overclocking.

If you don't know how to overclock, you want to go in small increments until you find it unstable; and then back down to where it was stable and either run that, or increase in even smaller increments. Example:

+25MHz core clock;
Test;
if stable, +25Mhz;
Test;
if unstable, -25MHz;
Test,
if stable, +10MHz;
Test

and hopefully you get the idea. You won't be able to "boost" by very much. So if you want to do it, keep it to a minimum.
 
Solution

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