Never knew you could push an 8800GTS *that* high without it making trouble...
Did you raise traffic to 25/60 and fly real world weather?
I think the video card is set as high as it should go and still remain in safe limits based on the manufacture components and how they are currently working right now.
Will it go higher? It may go another 50+ on the core and 100 on the memory but in order to do that it requires special attention to setting it up using software to load it down and scan for artifacts all the while it monitors the temp.
Unless you would feel comfortable running a scan tool that will check for artifacts while it heats the card up so we can find the max core and memory on the card, I would say the clock on it is where it needs to be.
Be aware, finding and locking higher values and running for hours will most likely push the card very hard and although I have done it in the past just to see how far things will go and then reduce the clocks based on the MAX values instead of hardware estimate, it also comes with much higher risks. I will leave that up to you because we are already 150MHz+ on the core and 350+ on the memory past factory specs.
I also want you to understand, thus far there has been no real load placed on the card in a looped stress test, nor has the card been exposed and run a DX10 application so the current clock may be fine for FSX and DX9 but be over the top for a full blown DX10 run. That part I can not estimate without observing a test using the criteria mentioned to evaluate the situation.
I just happen to know what the memory chips and other components on the card will do so we skipped about 10 steps in testing and went right for the meat and potatos.
The correct way to do it is use a base increase (for that card) of about 50Mhz per clock, then raise it 10-20Mhz steps using a scan tool to check for temp and artifacts between each increase. The correct process takes about a day to do it right and about another 1/2 day to load scan the final numbers to insure no overheat and artifacts may appear.
I think the video card is set as high as it should go and still remain in safe limits based on the manufacture components and how they are currently working right now.
Will it go higher? It may go another 50+ on the core and 100 on the memory but in order to do that it requires special attention to setting it up using software to load it down and scan for artifacts all the while it monitors the temp.
Unless you would feel comfortable running a scan tool that will check for artifacts while it heats the card up so we can find the max core and memory on the card, I would say the clock on it is where it needs to be.
Be aware, finding and locking higher values and running for hours will most likely push the card very hard and although I have done it in the past just to see how far things will go and then reduce the clocks based on the MAX values instead of hardware estimate, it also comes with much higher risks. I will leave that up to you because we are already 150MHz+ on the core and 350+ on the memory past factory specs.
I also want you to understand, thus far there has been no real load placed on the card in a looped stress test, nor has the card been exposed and run a DX10 application so the current clock may be fine for FSX and DX9 but be over the top for a full blown DX10 run. That part I can not estimate without observing a test using the criteria mentioned to evaluate the situation.
I think I'm happy where I'm at right now with the card. I don't want to overdo it. Like you said I'm 1500/350+ the factory specs and any more would just put me back in the bottleneck..
I just happen to know what the memory chips and other components on the card will do so we skipped about 10 steps in testing and went right for the meat and potatos.
Ah, this explains a lot.
I was wondering, since you kicked the chip frequency to 600 in the first run - seemed a little odd to me.The correct way to do it is use a base increase (for that card) of about 50Mhz per clock, then raise it 10-20Mhz steps using a scan tool to check for temp and artifacts between each increase. The correct process takes about a day to do it right and about another 1/2 day to load scan the final numbers to insure no overheat and artifacts may appear.
Do you think the ATI Tool can do this well enough?
P.S: Since the 8800GTS are all based on one and the same reference design...could those values also be used for an XFX 8800GTS?
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