- Joined
- Jun 3, 2018
- Messages
- 911 (0.40/day)
- Location
- Al Balqa', Jordan
Processor | AMD Ryzen 5 2600 (Covered with Cooler Master MasterGel Pro) |
---|---|
Motherboard | ASRock B450 Steel Legend, BIOS Version: 8.01 [Beta] |
Cooling | Cooler Master MasterLiquid ML120L V2 RGB, 5x Galax Vortex Wind-02 (3xFront Intake, 2x Top exhaust) |
Memory | Kingston FURY Beast RGB 3600 MT/s 32 GB (8 GB x4), (KF436C17BBA/8) |
Video Card(s) | Palit GeForce GTX 1660 Ti Dual OC |
Storage | Kingston NV2 1 TB |
Display(s) | MSI PRO M251 (HDMI), Running @104 Hz |
Case | Cooler Master MasterBox MB520 |
Audio Device(s) | HP H360G USB |
Power Supply | Cooler Master MWE 550 80+ White |
Mouse | HP G200 Black |
Keyboard | Redragon MITRA K551-1 RGB |
Software | Windows 11 Home |
The GPU in The PCI lane is already overclocked , but i'm buying a 750 ti soon and i think the lane itself will limit the performance , for now i have no problems with the geforce 210.I would guess this would be something Semi similar to FSB overclocking ,which is basically a last ditch effort when you have no other option left. Your best bet is to overclock the device you have plugged in to the PCI lane ,not the lane itself . if the only source is from that angry little munchkins website, then I don't have much faith in its benefits, never put much stock in anustechtips
Unless it's limiting the GPU's performance ??!!Overclocking the PCIe bus offers absolutely no advantage.
But , i think your mobo has a PCI-E 2.0 , or maybe it was other mobo.It's not , I ran benchmarks on my 1060 on PCIe 1.1 and the differences where within the margin of error. And to put things into perspective that's a card about 4-5 times faster.
Last edited: