- Joined
- Jan 13, 2016
- Messages
- 660 (0.22/day)
- Location
- 127.0.0.1, London, UK
System Name | Warranty Void Mk.IV |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 5 5600 |
Motherboard | Asus X470-I Strix |
Cooling | Arctic Freezer 240 + 2x Be Quiet! Pure Wings 2 140mm / Silverstone 120mm Slim |
Memory | Crucial Ballistix Elite 3600MHz 2x8GB CL16 - Tightened Sub-timings |
Video Card(s) | EVGA RTX 2080 XC Ultra |
Storage | WD SN550 / MX300 / MX500 |
Display(s) | AOC CU34G2 / LG 29UM69G-B - Auxilary |
Case | CM NR200p / Silverstone RVZ03-B |
Audio Device(s) | Realtek ALC 1220+SupremeFX |
Power Supply | Corsair CX550M 550W / Silverstone SX650-G 650W |
Mouse | Logitech G302/G502/G203 / RPG: Corsair Nightsword |
Keyboard | CM Masterkeys Pro M / Asus Sagaris GK100 |
VR HMD | Oculus Rift S |
Software | Windows 10 Pro x64 - LTSB |
Neither did mine. But the card was unstable as hell, it would barely reach 70c and then make the driver hard-crash. I could run my GTX 660 OC'd at 90c and it just purrs like a kitten (I ran it like that for a stress test, something that the R9 380 couldn't handle). Maybe I should have tried undervolting it or something, at 70c it shouldn't make the system blow out after running at that in between 2-6 minutes. Or maybe it was the Elpida VRAM that was messing up. Those chips suck, but I think I would see artifacts before a crash, that never happened though.Blanket statement, mine does not throttle
I have never entertained the idea of undervolting a card until recently, so I tried that on the GTX 460, and I got GTX 470 performance with lower voltage! That's AWESOME! I think the 380 deserved a similar treatment, but I don't have the card anymore to test it. Shame.
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