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- Nov 11, 2020
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Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 5700X |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus TUF Gaming B550M-Plus (Wi-Fi) |
Cooling | Thermalright PA120 SE; Arctic P12, F12 |
Memory | Crucial BL8G32C16U4W.M8FE1 ×2 |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire Nitro+ RX 6600 XT |
Storage | Kingston SKC3000D/2048G; Samsung MZVLB1T0HBLR-000L2; Seagate ST1000DM010-2EP102 |
Display(s) | AOC 24G2W1G4 |
Case | Sama MiCube |
Audio Device(s) | Somic G923 |
Power Supply | EVGA 650 GD |
Mouse | Logitech G102 |
Keyboard | Logitech K845 TTC Brown |
Software | Windows 10 Pro 1903, Dism++, CCleaner |
Benchmark Scores | CPU-Z 17.01.64: 3700X @ 4.6 GHz 1.3375 V scoring 557/6206; 760K @ 5 GHz 1.5 V scoring 292/964 |
Yesterday I attempted to overclock my Sapphire RX 580 2048SP Pulse.
Wait... What is a 580 2048SP? Oh, yes, it's a Chinese market only SKU. It can be simply regarded as an RX 570 with better binning and as a result possible higher frequencies. I think AMD's purpose of launching this model was to distinguish this from those have mined, e.g. RX 570, RX 580 and other GCN-based cards.
We all know that GCN cards come with a default voltage that's too high. So, nice tweaking could reduce both power consumption and thermal performance and meanwhile proper overclocking could bring nice framerates.
This model runs at 1306 MHz @ 1150 mV at default, and its VRAM manufactured by Hynix runs at 1750 MHz.
Throughout the process, I overclocked VRAM to 2000 MHz and called it a day. I overclocked and undervolted the core with Afterburner software and tested it with Furmark 1.26 at 1080P preset.
Here are the results:
In daily gaming, I set the card at 1024 MHz @ 900 mV for a good gaming experience.
The frequencies above 1306 MHz are all overclocking, but we can see that none of their voltages is higher than default voltage - 1150 mV. That's why we say GCN cards need undervolting. (I don't know why manufacturers make it like that... )
And at 1411 MHz which some models of RX 580 (2304SP, the original Polaris 20 XTX) are rated at, my card could do it at 1075 mV.
And about voltage I have to say something more. In the HWiNFO64 software, I saw there was always a little voltage drop while running, no matter it was running Furmark or any game. I seemed not to see this happening back a year ago and I've only been using the card for only two years. So when running Furmark at 1411 MHz, I actually gave it 1085 mV to avoid pushing the card off the edge. But as it turned out, its actual voltage was 1.077 V, only a tiny little more than 1075 mV. I can't tell whether that's a hardware problem or monitoring fault.
Undervolting makes a huge difference to power consumption and thermal performance. I increased the TDP limit by 20% (100% = 150 W) but even 1411 MHz only took 158 W in Furmark. If it's running at 1150 mV, it could be about 180 W. And in common games like GTA5, it stayed under 100 W and worked silently.
I hope this could help you tweak your own cards. Thx.
Wait... What is a 580 2048SP? Oh, yes, it's a Chinese market only SKU. It can be simply regarded as an RX 570 with better binning and as a result possible higher frequencies. I think AMD's purpose of launching this model was to distinguish this from those have mined, e.g. RX 570, RX 580 and other GCN-based cards.
We all know that GCN cards come with a default voltage that's too high. So, nice tweaking could reduce both power consumption and thermal performance and meanwhile proper overclocking could bring nice framerates.
This model runs at 1306 MHz @ 1150 mV at default, and its VRAM manufactured by Hynix runs at 1750 MHz.
Throughout the process, I overclocked VRAM to 2000 MHz and called it a day. I overclocked and undervolted the core with Afterburner software and tested it with Furmark 1.26 at 1080P preset.
Here are the results:
In daily gaming, I set the card at 1024 MHz @ 900 mV for a good gaming experience.
The frequencies above 1306 MHz are all overclocking, but we can see that none of their voltages is higher than default voltage - 1150 mV. That's why we say GCN cards need undervolting. (I don't know why manufacturers make it like that... )
And at 1411 MHz which some models of RX 580 (2304SP, the original Polaris 20 XTX) are rated at, my card could do it at 1075 mV.
And about voltage I have to say something more. In the HWiNFO64 software, I saw there was always a little voltage drop while running, no matter it was running Furmark or any game. I seemed not to see this happening back a year ago and I've only been using the card for only two years. So when running Furmark at 1411 MHz, I actually gave it 1085 mV to avoid pushing the card off the edge. But as it turned out, its actual voltage was 1.077 V, only a tiny little more than 1075 mV. I can't tell whether that's a hardware problem or monitoring fault.
Undervolting makes a huge difference to power consumption and thermal performance. I increased the TDP limit by 20% (100% = 150 W) but even 1411 MHz only took 158 W in Furmark. If it's running at 1150 mV, it could be about 180 W. And in common games like GTA5, it stayed under 100 W and worked silently.
I hope this could help you tweak your own cards. Thx.
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