Soldato
Welp, time to say goodbye to my PSU. Had another game crash today, tested everything, all is green. Decided to test PSU load, my GPU is pulling 500w peaks, my 850w PSU just isn't up to the task. Ordered a 1200w replacement. Oh well!
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Not had any crashes yet with my RM750x, I probably made a good decision to go with the 5600X as it's only 65W.
What CPU are you using agnes?
Have you got a watt meter to see how much you're pulling at the wall?i9 9900k @5.2Ghz on all cores, that, plus a plethora of 120 fans for radiators, WC pump, Aquacomputer board, top end sound card (requires direct power from PSU). All of that, and then not to mention my 3090 is at max power target and overclocked to 2.1Ghz on the core and 20ghz memory (have tested OC's extensively and even tested without, card is solid). I think at peak, my PSU simply can't keep up with the system
Have you got a watt meter to see how much you're pulling at the wall?
From memory my setup is similar to yours minus the sound card and that will pull around 650-700w at the wall while gaming.I do not sadly. If the new PSU doesn't resolve, I can always return it, I'll just do a loose install and run my tests again.
From memory my setup is similar to yours minus the sound card and that will pull around 650-700w at the wall while gaming.
Anyone know how many watts are required for the card to literally NEVER drop below 2000mhz? I'm running 450watts now on a Suprem-X Bios and still under heaviest load in 3d mark it's possible to hit power limit and clock down to 1950mhz at 100% usage.
Actually I'm thinking this might simply be temperature doing this. Hmm gotta keep card under 59c somehow...........Going to retry that exact test with 100% fan speed.
Given that I've seen ~345 W in the right circumstances even when running at 1800 MHz @ 800 mV, to get guaranteed 2000 MHz at all times then you'd need well north of a 500 W power limit. Less would be enough in most situation, but there's always an outlier.
IMO, I'm not convinced the increased power limits are worth it. In most real situations you can get a good clock even at 350/400 W. The amount of voltage you have to pump once you exceed ~1950 MHz means that you usually spend a ton of power for barely anything.
Same thing with the questionable overclocks you see. 3090s unmodded at 2100 or even 2200 MHz claimed. Funny when you see them post a 3D mark run and their average clock speed is down in the 1900s!
Try also undervolting slightly. I find that if you smash the voltage, the card will bounce off the power limit and dip harder. Usually lowering voltage means you won't peak as high, but will not hit the power limit and dip up and down as much.
Overall in games does not matter as you don't draw full power (bar a few RT games)
Crank up the fan speed. Also try messing with the voltage curve. Can sometimes get better results by not trying to go absolutely all out in performance and smash off the power limit.
Thermal throttling will do that! Thankfully, with it under water, it's consistent. I think I've seen it drop to 2010 at one point after a long session. If this solves the problem, I'll consider it a bonus as I'll also get additional silence rather than the poor little 850 crying with fan scream under load
Given that I've seen ~345 W in the right circumstances even when running at 1800 MHz @ 800 mV, to get guaranteed 2000 MHz at all times then you'd need well north of a 500 W power limit. Less would be enough in most situation, but there's always an outlier.
IMO, I'm not convinced the increased power limits are worth it. In most real situations you can get a good clock even at 350/400 W. The amount of voltage you have to pump once you exceed ~1950 MHz means that you usually spend a ton of power for barely anything.
Same thing with the questionable overclocks you see. 3090s unmodded at 2100 or even 2200 MHz claimed. Funny when you see them post a 3D mark run and their average clock speed is down in the 1900s!
Thanks. What software do you use?. I've only been looking at afterburner so far
how many my frames are we talking about with overclocking your card the instability doesnt seem to be worth it to me.
how many my frames are we talking about with overclocking your card the instability doesnt seem to be worth it to me.
It was worth it with my 2080Ti as it couldn’t quite cut it at 4K/60. A big OC overcame that in some titles.
Thankfully the 3090FE doesn’t suffer the same affliction and other than CP2077, I’ve yet to find any game I’ve got that doesn’t surpass that at stock.
However, we all like freebies and if you can rinse a little more performance out of your kit for a little time and effort, why wouldn’t you try.
how many my frames are we talking about with overclocking your card the instability doesnt seem to be worth it to me.
Like others mentioned, if your unstable, you have an issue with your overlock.
However its worth tweaking and learning behaviour of and I imagine most enjoy dabling, more so if you get into undervolting and Min/maxing. For example I mentioned 2.1 Ghz as my daily profile for games I play. Thats with an slight undervolt compared to stock of 1.013v when playing AC valhalla. For my card at stock it will drink 1.062v or there abouts at stock while clock speeds hit around 1985 mhz then taper down to around 1955 Mhz or so. So in effect I get about 6-7% extra ingame performance but I also draw on average about 10w-15w or so less power (differs game to game of course). To me thats win win and i learnt the behaviour of my card on the way.