I may have it go to 75% sooner and may have it increase slightly higher at 80 degrees. I do plan on tinkering with the fan profiles a little more before I decide to work on the clock speed of the GPU and memory. Being in a fairly SFF setup, Corsair Obsidian 250D, I don't think that is too bad considering no other adjustments were made. My boost clock during extended plays in GTA V so far appear to stay over 1800 MHz, settling around 70-100 MHz over stock boost clock for the duration of game play. By changing the fan profile to run the fan at around 50% at around 60 degrees, 75% at 80 degrees, and 100% for everything else above my boost clock has done a much better job at settling to a fairly fixed rate and stays pretty consistently above the stock boost clock with no other changes. This would cause the boost clock to vary quite a bit, constantly going up and down and sometime dipping below the max stock boost clock (1733 MHz) but I don't recall ever seeing it dip below stock clock (1607 MHz). At stock settings the fan was capping around 50-55% which, while quiet, seemed to hit the 80-82 degree ceiling relatively quickly when playing GTA V maxed out at 4K resolutions (minus AA, since 4K on a 27" does a pretty good job at masking aliasing). I haven't done any overclock yet, but I did adjust my fan profile using the Afterburner 4.3.0 Beta 4.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |