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3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results

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KingEngineRevUp
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/20 21:02:13 (permalink)
DaBogo
KingEngineRevUp
Almost broke 22000 GPU score in Timespy, just shy a few points. +195/+1250
https://www.3dmark.com/spy/20913451
https://www.3dmark.com/pr/1082242
 
Also, here are my stress test, +165/+1250 running 20 loops straight each
https://www.3dmark.com/tsst/2021793
https://www.3dmark.com/prst/109334
 




but can +165mhz / +1250memory also be used for daily tasks and gaming or is this only for benchmarking?
 
Thanks
Dali


Nope, and I can explain why. Games that are lighter in loads, lower in power can cause your clocks to boost 15-30 MHz and when that happens you'll crash. You see, my card would jump up clocks I didn't set them at due to boost, it would jump up to 2115-2130 or sometimes even 2145 on a light load and then crash. I was stable and I passed those stress test because my card was power limited and the average clocks dropped due to that.
 
I have since backed off to +120/+1250 and haven't crashed at all in games like Assassin's Credd Valhalla and Warzone which are lighter loads. I was able to game for many hours on RE8 Village but that's because that game power limited my card due to RTX. 
 
I highly recommend anyone that thinks they're stable at a certain clock to start playing lower load games. You have to make sure you're stable across the the board. Not just at the top of your voltage curve, but at the bottom and at light loads that can cause low thermal bonus boost when you're around 50C and lower. 
post edited by KingEngineRevUp - 2021/07/20 21:04:35
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DaBogo
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/21 04:21:58 (permalink)
KingEngineRevUp
DaBogo
KingEngineRevUp
Almost broke 22000 GPU score in Timespy, just shy a few points. +195/+1250
https://www.3dmark.com/spy/20913451
https://www.3dmark.com/pr/1082242
 
Also, here are my stress test, +165/+1250 running 20 loops straight each
https://www.3dmark.com/tsst/2021793
https://www.3dmark.com/prst/109334
 




but can +165mhz / +1250memory also be used for daily tasks and gaming or is this only for benchmarking?
 
Thanks
Dali


Nope, and I can explain why. Games that are lighter in loads, lower in power can cause your clocks to boost 15-30 MHz and when that happens you'll crash. You see, my card would jump up clocks I didn't set them at due to boost, it would jump up to 2115-2130 or sometimes even 2145 on a light load and then crash. I was stable and I passed those stress test because my card was power limited and the average clocks dropped due to that.
 
I have since backed off to +120/+1250 and haven't crashed at all in games like Assassin's Credd Valhalla and Warzone which are lighter loads. I was able to game for many hours on RE8 Village but that's because that game power limited my card due to RTX. 
 
I highly recommend anyone that thinks they're stable at a certain clock to start playing lower load games. You have to make sure you're stable across the the board. Not just at the top of your voltage curve, but at the bottom and at light loads that can cause low thermal bonus boost when you're around 50C and lower. 


That‘s exactly the information i was expecting. To be honest i never had +120 / + 1250 + maxed out power to 113 and i just did two tests: time spy / mark fire and i‘m really surprised how clean this went through. My highest result yet. I‘ve just noted that final result was worst than my highest score till now because i will need to finetune my ryzen 5900x there. How is your ryzen overclocked? bios or with some other tools? I know that it also would help to tune that 3800mhz rams but due leak of expirience i dont wanna screw stability just to hit higher number on the benchmark. By the end of the day benchmark score is worthless if i cant work on that system. But i was just wondering cause i was seeing some other threads and oc values and i was not sure what is a point going so high but thank you for explanation.

Br
Dali
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KingEngineRevUp
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/21 10:31:45 (permalink)
DaBogo
KingEngineRevUp
DaBogo
KingEngineRevUp
Almost broke 22000 GPU score in Timespy, just shy a few points. +195/+1250
https://www.3dmark.com/spy/20913451
https://www.3dmark.com/pr/1082242
 
Also, here are my stress test, +165/+1250 running 20 loops straight each
https://www.3dmark.com/tsst/2021793
https://www.3dmark.com/prst/109334
 




but can +165mhz / +1250memory also be used for daily tasks and gaming or is this only for benchmarking?
 
Thanks
Dali


Nope, and I can explain why. Games that are lighter in loads, lower in power can cause your clocks to boost 15-30 MHz and when that happens you'll crash. You see, my card would jump up clocks I didn't set them at due to boost, it would jump up to 2115-2130 or sometimes even 2145 on a light load and then crash. I was stable and I passed those stress test because my card was power limited and the average clocks dropped due to that.
 
I have since backed off to +120/+1250 and haven't crashed at all in games like Assassin's Credd Valhalla and Warzone which are lighter loads. I was able to game for many hours on RE8 Village but that's because that game power limited my card due to RTX. 
 
I highly recommend anyone that thinks they're stable at a certain clock to start playing lower load games. You have to make sure you're stable across the the board. Not just at the top of your voltage curve, but at the bottom and at light loads that can cause low thermal bonus boost when you're around 50C and lower. 


That‘s exactly the information i was expecting. To be honest i never had +120 / + 1250 + maxed out power to 113 and i just did two tests: time spy / mark fire and i‘m really surprised how clean this went through. My highest result yet. I‘ve just noted that final result was worst than my highest score till now because i will need to finetune my ryzen 5900x there. How is your ryzen overclocked? bios or with some other tools? I know that it also would help to tune that 3800mhz rams but due leak of expirience i dont wanna screw stability just to hit higher number on the benchmark. By the end of the day benchmark score is worthless if i cant work on that system. But i was just wondering cause i was seeing some other threads and oc values and i was not sure what is a point going so high but thank you for explanation.

Br
Dali



Well here's one thing that also happened, for aesthetic reasons, I'm using QL120 fans on my hybrid and they suck. My GPU temperatures jumped 7C-10C higher. So that's probably the main reason I have to go down from +165 to +120. Where I was comfortably around 55-58C at max load, I am now at 63-65C. 
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Ineedgfx
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/21 15:52:47 (permalink)
That's a HUGE performance hit for aesthetics

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Super Flower 1K Plat
EVGA 3080Ti
12700k(5.3Ghz)/2tb&1tb NVME/32GB 3600/14/14/14/14
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KingEngineRevUp
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/21 16:47:07 (permalink)
Ineedgfx
That's a HUGE performance hit for aesthetics




Lol, 0.5% in performance loss is not huge. But what's considered a huge loss in performance can be relative. 
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talon951
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/21 17:08:42 (permalink)
It would only drop one bin max. 15 mhz
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/21 17:36:44 (permalink)
I might be able to do some real benchmarks by the end of the weekend with my 3080ti. Looks like my old 4790k mobo is dead that I've got the 3080ti in. New X570 board on the way. Already have a 3900x and 3600C16 left over from upgrades to my 3090 machine.
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CSPlayer089
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/21 18:55:28 (permalink)
Honestly not much point in OC'ing this card.
 
Here's my Timespy results. Very small OC. +25mhz core and +800MHz memory.
 
Stock 10900k
Mushkin Redline DDR4-3600 16-19-19-39
 
https://www.3dmark.com/spy/21458388

AsRock Z490 Taichi
Intel Core i9 10900k 
Gigabyte AORUS 3080Ti Master 12GB
EVGA SuperNOVA 1300G2 PSU
32GB (4x8GB) Mushkin Redline Lumina DDR4-3600
Creative Labs Soundblaster X G6 USB DAC/Sound Card
EK Basic AIO 360 w/ 3 Noctua NF-P12 Redux
WD Black SN850 1TB SSD
Phanteks Enthoo 719 full tower case 
ASUS PG32UQ G-Sync Monitor
Hyper X Alloy Elite Keyboard
HyperX Pulsefire Dart/Steelseries QcK Mass mousepad
Kingston Hyper X Cloud headset
 
 
 
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Ineedgfx
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/21 19:01:11 (permalink)
KingEngineRevUp
 
Lol, 0.5% in performance loss is not huge. But what's considered a huge loss in performance can be relative. 





 
Fair point, I should have said huge temp performance hit, not so much in actual gfx frequencies. And we're all chasing small gains; some would even say tiny gains relative to the monetary investment.

Rig:
Asus Z690 Strix D4
Super Flower 1K Plat
EVGA 3080Ti
12700k(5.3Ghz)/2tb&1tb NVME/32GB 3600/14/14/14/14
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ObscureEmpyre
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 08:45:50 (permalink)
I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.


KingEngineRevUp
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 09:48:12 (permalink)
ObscureEmpyre
I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 
 
I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 
 
When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 
 
That's my advice. 
ObscureEmpyre
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 10:18:24 (permalink)
KingEngineRevUp
ObscureEmpyre
I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 
 
I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 
 
When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 
 
That's my advice. 

+1

Funny you say that about War Zone. It randomly crashes for me at +150, so I have to downclock it to +125. It’s the only game that’s given me crap so far.


faux123
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 10:22:18 (permalink)
I finally have enough post counts to post links to my score https://www.3dmark.com/pr/1073556
ObscureEmpyre
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 11:03:08 (permalink)
Hey, on a related note, how bad is the coil whine for those of you who have this card? While I am completely satisfied with mine, its whine is the loudest of all the GPUs I’ve owned over the years.


KingEngineRevUp
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 11:14:01 (permalink)
I can only hear a little wine if I open my case up and put my ear close to the card. Other than that, I don't hear it over the fans. 
rottentreats
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 11:26:26 (permalink)
I am weird and kinda like the coil whine it lets me know it's working :D (I also enjoy my Voodoo1's mechanical relays firing when going into 3D mode) I recall my 3080 XC3 whining more, my 3080 FTW3 Hybrid was quieter just a tad than my current 3080 Ti hybrid.  When gaming I use headphones so oh well, and I only use my speakers when listing to music (not under game load so no whine)
 
Back to this thread tho, for those wondering if overclocking is worth it I say it's a hard yes.
Stock - https://www.3dmark.com/spy/21701456
Graphics Test 1: 133.79 fps
Graphics Test 2: 116.61 fps
 
My daily 100% stable OC of +150/699 (yes I could push the mem more but core is far more important) - https://www.3dmark.com/spy/21701688
Graphics Test 1: 142.24 fps
Graphics Test 2: 122.9 fps
 
My PB - https://www.3dmark.com/spy/21394187
Graphics Test 1: 148.66 fps
Graphics Test 2: 127.11 fps
 
I'd rather game than benchmark tho so, welp off to the gamings.
post edited by rottentreats - 2021/07/23 11:27:38

GPU: EVGA GeForce RTX 3080 Ti FTW3 ULTRA HYBRID

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ObscureEmpyre
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 11:30:13 (permalink)
KingEngineRevUp
I can only hear a little wine if I open my case up and put my ear close to the card. Other than that, I don't hear it over the fans. 

I wish mine were that quiet. I heard it with the stock air cooler and thought it would be more noticeable with a water block. Sure enough, I was right about that. It’d be nice if EVGA injected the inductors with resin or something to keep them from vibrating so much. Even my amplifier for my home theater system is encased in resin to keep the iron cores of the toroids from humming so much.


KingEngineRevUp
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 11:33:23 (permalink)
ObscureEmpyre
KingEngineRevUp
ObscureEmpyre
I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 
 
I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 
 
When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 
 
That's my advice. 

+1

Funny you say that about War Zone. It randomly crashes for me at +150, so I have to downclock it to +125. It’s the only game that’s given me crap so far.



Yeah, continue to test lower powered games. And +125 is really +120. Remember it's in increments of 15. If you want to see this, open up the voltage curve. Type +120 and hit enter. Then type +125 and hit enter. I bet you curve just falls back down to +120?
ObscureEmpyre
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 13:32:18 (permalink)
KingEngineRevUp
ObscureEmpyre
KingEngineRevUp
ObscureEmpyre
I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 

I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 

When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 

That's my advice. 

+1

Funny you say that about War Zone. It randomly crashes for me at +150, so I have to downclock it to +125. It’s the only game that’s given me crap so far.



Yeah, continue to test lower powered games. And +125 is really +120. Remember it's in increments of 15. If you want to see this, open up the voltage curve. Type +120 and hit enter. Then type +125 and hit enter. I bet you curve just falls back down to +120?

I’ve been benchmarking for more realistic gaming performance, and I found that +165/+1350 is the sweet spot. However, we both know that games like War Zone, as we discussed, can have a negative impact. I may also drop my overclock to +120 and see how it runs with +1350.

On an unrelated note, is anyone else having issues with games randomly minimizing to the desktop? This only recently started for me, and I get the impression it’s from the latest round of Windows updates. It’s even doing it when benchmarking which crashes the benchmark when it does this. So annoying.


KingEngineRevUp
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 13:50:19 (permalink)
ObscureEmpyre
KingEngineRevUp
ObscureEmpyre
KingEngineRevUp
ObscureEmpyre
I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 

I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 

When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 

That's my advice. 

+1

Funny you say that about War Zone. It randomly crashes for me at +150, so I have to downclock it to +125. It’s the only game that’s given me crap so far.



Yeah, continue to test lower powered games. And +125 is really +120. Remember it's in increments of 15. If you want to see this, open up the voltage curve. Type +120 and hit enter. Then type +125 and hit enter. I bet you curve just falls back down to +120?

I’ve been benchmarking for more realistic gaming performance, and I found that +165/+1350 is the sweet spot. However, we both know that games like War Zone, as we discussed, can have a negative impact. I may also drop my overclock to +120 and see how it runs with +1350.

On an unrelated note, is anyone else having issues with games randomly minimizing to the desktop? This only recently started for me, and I get the impression it’s from the latest round of Windows updates. It’s even doing it when benchmarking which crashes the benchmark when it does this. So annoying.



I was able to play a few games at +165 for hours no problem. The reason, it's because the games power limited the card and made the clocks drop down so I was actually stable at that voltage. 
 
Playing games that don't require as much power can, again as I explained earlier, cause boost to shoot your clocks up, become unstable and crash. 
 
I guess you can do a profile for certain games. For me, I don't want to have to switch between profiles, so I decided to just stick to +120 for convenience reasons. I'm not really missing that +45 Mhz, but I am missing out if my buddies and I are close to dubbing in Warzone and I get booted. It happened 3 times, so I said "screw the extra 45 Mhz!"
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 14:10:57 (permalink)
KingEngineRevUp
ObscureEmpyre
KingEngineRevUp
ObscureEmpyre
KingEngineRevUp
ObscureEmpyre
I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 

I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 

When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 

That's my advice. 

+1

Funny you say that about War Zone. It randomly crashes for me at +150, so I have to downclock it to +125. It’s the only game that’s given me crap so far.



Yeah, continue to test lower powered games. And +125 is really +120. Remember it's in increments of 15. If you want to see this, open up the voltage curve. Type +120 and hit enter. Then type +125 and hit enter. I bet you curve just falls back down to +120?

I’ve been benchmarking for more realistic gaming performance, and I found that +165/+1350 is the sweet spot. However, we both know that games like War Zone, as we discussed, can have a negative impact. I may also drop my overclock to +120 and see how it runs with +1350.

On an unrelated note, is anyone else having issues with games randomly minimizing to the desktop? This only recently started for me, and I get the impression it’s from the latest round of Windows updates. It’s even doing it when benchmarking which crashes the benchmark when it does this. So annoying.



I was able to play a few games at +165 for hours no problem. The reason, it's because the games power limited the card and made the clocks drop down so I was actually stable at that voltage. 
 
Playing games that don't require as much power can, again as I explained earlier, cause boost to shoot your clocks up, become unstable and crash. 
 
I guess you can do a profile for certain games. For me, I don't want to have to switch between profiles, so I decided to just stick to +120 for convenience reasons. I'm not really missing that +45 Mhz, but I am missing out if my buddies and I are close to dubbing in Warzone and I get booted. It happened 3 times, so I said "screw the extra 45 Mhz!"

That’s my bottom line as well - not having to switch profiles. In all reality, those extra 45 MHz only equate to a couple of FPS in gaming performance. By the way, +120/+1350 didn’t seem like it was cutting it, but I did just pass a +120/+1250 Time Spy stress test at 99.1%. It’s looking like our cards are pretty much evenly matched.


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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 14:22:11 (permalink)
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I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 

I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 

When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 

That's my advice. 

+1

Funny you say that about War Zone. It randomly crashes for me at +150, so I have to downclock it to +125. It’s the only game that’s given me crap so far.



Yeah, continue to test lower powered games. And +125 is really +120. Remember it's in increments of 15. If you want to see this, open up the voltage curve. Type +120 and hit enter. Then type +125 and hit enter. I bet you curve just falls back down to +120?

I’ve been benchmarking for more realistic gaming performance, and I found that +165/+1350 is the sweet spot. However, we both know that games like War Zone, as we discussed, can have a negative impact. I may also drop my overclock to +120 and see how it runs with +1350.

On an unrelated note, is anyone else having issues with games randomly minimizing to the desktop? This only recently started for me, and I get the impression it’s from the latest round of Windows updates. It’s even doing it when benchmarking which crashes the benchmark when it does this. So annoying.



I was able to play a few games at +165 for hours no problem. The reason, it's because the games power limited the card and made the clocks drop down so I was actually stable at that voltage. 
 
Playing games that don't require as much power can, again as I explained earlier, cause boost to shoot your clocks up, become unstable and crash. 
 
I guess you can do a profile for certain games. For me, I don't want to have to switch between profiles, so I decided to just stick to +120 for convenience reasons. I'm not really missing that +45 Mhz, but I am missing out if my buddies and I are close to dubbing in Warzone and I get booted. It happened 3 times, so I said "screw the extra 45 Mhz!"

That’s my bottom line as well - not having to switch profiles. In all reality, those extra 45 MHz only equate to a couple of FPS in gaming performance. By the way, +120/+1350 didn’t seem like it was cutting it, but I did just pass a +120/+1250 Time Spy stress test at 99.1%. It’s looking like our cards are pretty much evenly matched.



Time Spy and Port Royal stress test only tell you how your card is power limited. Being power limited doesn't stress test your card at the max clocks and lowest voltage point on a curve. If you look at my previous post here:
 
Also, here are my stress test, +165/+1250 running 20 loops straight each
https://www.3dmark.com/tsst/2021793
https://www.3dmark.com/prst/109334
 
And again, I found later that lower powered games caused me to crash. So I would only rely on these stress test for one type of test, when your card TDP is being pushed to the max. 
 
 
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 14:41:05 (permalink)
Praise be the silicon goddess for she giveth greatness to thee.

Seriously though, nice.
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 16:02:29 (permalink)
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I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 

I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 

When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 

That's my advice. 

+1

Funny you say that about War Zone. It randomly crashes for me at +150, so I have to downclock it to +125. It’s the only game that’s given me crap so far.



Yeah, continue to test lower powered games. And +125 is really +120. Remember it's in increments of 15. If you want to see this, open up the voltage curve. Type +120 and hit enter. Then type +125 and hit enter. I bet you curve just falls back down to +120?

I’ve been benchmarking for more realistic gaming performance, and I found that +165/+1350 is the sweet spot. However, we both know that games like War Zone, as we discussed, can have a negative impact. I may also drop my overclock to +120 and see how it runs with +1350.

On an unrelated note, is anyone else having issues with games randomly minimizing to the desktop? This only recently started for me, and I get the impression it’s from the latest round of Windows updates. It’s even doing it when benchmarking which crashes the benchmark when it does this. So annoying.



I was able to play a few games at +165 for hours no problem. The reason, it's because the games power limited the card and made the clocks drop down so I was actually stable at that voltage. 

Playing games that don't require as much power can, again as I explained earlier, cause boost to shoot your clocks up, become unstable and crash. 

I guess you can do a profile for certain games. For me, I don't want to have to switch between profiles, so I decided to just stick to +120 for convenience reasons. I'm not really missing that +45 Mhz, but I am missing out if my buddies and I are close to dubbing in Warzone and I get booted. It happened 3 times, so I said "screw the extra 45 Mhz!"

That’s my bottom line as well - not having to switch profiles. In all reality, those extra 45 MHz only equate to a couple of FPS in gaming performance. By the way, +120/+1350 didn’t seem like it was cutting it, but I did just pass a +120/+1250 Time Spy stress test at 99.1%. It’s looking like our cards are pretty much evenly matched.



Time Spy and Port Royal stress test only tell you how your card is power limited. Being power limited doesn't stress test your card at the max clocks and lowest voltage point on a curve. If you look at my previous post here:
 
Also, here are my stress test, +165/+1250 running 20 loops straight each
https://www.3dmark.com/tsst/2021793
https://www.3dmark.com/prst/109334
 
And again, I found later that lower powered games caused me to crash. So I would only rely on these stress test for one type of test, when your card TDP is being pushed to the max. 
 
 

What are you using to test the lowest point with? Also, most of the games I play that don’t max out a GPU’s power also don’t always ramp up the core clock if the game environment isn’t that demanding. Occasionally, I play Star Wars: The Old Republic, for example, and a lot of times the card sits between 1800-1900 MHz. Of course, that’s now just about a decade-old title, and not very demanding by today’s standards. But, that’s been my experience with other titles as well. If the GPU isn’t being fully utilized to max out a game’s engine, then the GPU won’t ramp up its core clock frequency towards max.


KingEngineRevUp
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 16:35:55 (permalink)
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I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 

I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 

When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 

That's my advice. 

+1

Funny you say that about War Zone. It randomly crashes for me at +150, so I have to downclock it to +125. It’s the only game that’s given me crap so far.



Yeah, continue to test lower powered games. And +125 is really +120. Remember it's in increments of 15. If you want to see this, open up the voltage curve. Type +120 and hit enter. Then type +125 and hit enter. I bet you curve just falls back down to +120?

I’ve been benchmarking for more realistic gaming performance, and I found that +165/+1350 is the sweet spot. However, we both know that games like War Zone, as we discussed, can have a negative impact. I may also drop my overclock to +120 and see how it runs with +1350.

On an unrelated note, is anyone else having issues with games randomly minimizing to the desktop? This only recently started for me, and I get the impression it’s from the latest round of Windows updates. It’s even doing it when benchmarking which crashes the benchmark when it does this. So annoying.



I was able to play a few games at +165 for hours no problem. The reason, it's because the games power limited the card and made the clocks drop down so I was actually stable at that voltage. 

Playing games that don't require as much power can, again as I explained earlier, cause boost to shoot your clocks up, become unstable and crash. 

I guess you can do a profile for certain games. For me, I don't want to have to switch between profiles, so I decided to just stick to +120 for convenience reasons. I'm not really missing that +45 Mhz, but I am missing out if my buddies and I are close to dubbing in Warzone and I get booted. It happened 3 times, so I said "screw the extra 45 Mhz!"

That’s my bottom line as well - not having to switch profiles. In all reality, those extra 45 MHz only equate to a couple of FPS in gaming performance. By the way, +120/+1350 didn’t seem like it was cutting it, but I did just pass a +120/+1250 Time Spy stress test at 99.1%. It’s looking like our cards are pretty much evenly matched.



Time Spy and Port Royal stress test only tell you how your card is power limited. Being power limited doesn't stress test your card at the max clocks and lowest voltage point on a curve. If you look at my previous post here:
 
Also, here are my stress test, +165/+1250 running 20 loops straight each
https://www.3dmark.com/tsst/2021793
https://www.3dmark.com/prst/109334
 
And again, I found later that lower powered games caused me to crash. So I would only rely on these stress test for one type of test, when your card TDP is being pushed to the max. 
 
 

What are you using to test the lowest point with? Also, most of the games I play that don’t max out a GPU’s power also don’t always ramp up the core clock if the game environment isn’t that demanding. Occasionally, I play Star Wars: The Old Republic, for example, and a lot of times the card sits between 1800-1900 MHz. Of course, that’s now just about a decade-old title, and not very demanding by today’s standards. But, that’s been my experience with other titles as well. If the GPU isn’t being fully utilized to max out a game’s engine, then the GPU won’t ramp up its core clock frequency towards max.



I found Assassin's Creed Valhalla to be a good test because it pushed the card to almost 100% usage, it didn't reach my monitors max hz (98FPS average on a 165 Hz monitor) and the power draw was 300-320W. 
 
This had my card at lower temperatures and it boosted upwards. I found that at +120W, I need to at least turn my voltage slider up 50% and it hasn't crashed in either ACV or Warzone. I haven't crashed since I moved to +120. 
 
 
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 16:46:20 (permalink)
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I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 

I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 

When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 

That's my advice. 

+1

Funny you say that about War Zone. It randomly crashes for me at +150, so I have to downclock it to +125. It’s the only game that’s given me crap so far.



Yeah, continue to test lower powered games. And +125 is really +120. Remember it's in increments of 15. If you want to see this, open up the voltage curve. Type +120 and hit enter. Then type +125 and hit enter. I bet you curve just falls back down to +120?

I’ve been benchmarking for more realistic gaming performance, and I found that +165/+1350 is the sweet spot. However, we both know that games like War Zone, as we discussed, can have a negative impact. I may also drop my overclock to +120 and see how it runs with +1350.

On an unrelated note, is anyone else having issues with games randomly minimizing to the desktop? This only recently started for me, and I get the impression it’s from the latest round of Windows updates. It’s even doing it when benchmarking which crashes the benchmark when it does this. So annoying.



I was able to play a few games at +165 for hours no problem. The reason, it's because the games power limited the card and made the clocks drop down so I was actually stable at that voltage. 

Playing games that don't require as much power can, again as I explained earlier, cause boost to shoot your clocks up, become unstable and crash. 

I guess you can do a profile for certain games. For me, I don't want to have to switch between profiles, so I decided to just stick to +120 for convenience reasons. I'm not really missing that +45 Mhz, but I am missing out if my buddies and I are close to dubbing in Warzone and I get booted. It happened 3 times, so I said "screw the extra 45 Mhz!"

That’s my bottom line as well - not having to switch profiles. In all reality, those extra 45 MHz only equate to a couple of FPS in gaming performance. By the way, +120/+1350 didn’t seem like it was cutting it, but I did just pass a +120/+1250 Time Spy stress test at 99.1%. It’s looking like our cards are pretty much evenly matched.



Time Spy and Port Royal stress test only tell you how your card is power limited. Being power limited doesn't stress test your card at the max clocks and lowest voltage point on a curve. If you look at my previous post here:

Also, here are my stress test, +165/+1250 running 20 loops straight each
https://www.3dmark.com/tsst/2021793
https://www.3dmark.com/prst/109334

And again, I found later that lower powered games caused me to crash. So I would only rely on these stress test for one type of test, when your card TDP is being pushed to the max. 



What are you using to test the lowest point with? Also, most of the games I play that don’t max out a GPU’s power also don’t always ramp up the core clock if the game environment isn’t that demanding. Occasionally, I play Star Wars: The Old Republic, for example, and a lot of times the card sits between 1800-1900 MHz. Of course, that’s now just about a decade-old title, and not very demanding by today’s standards. But, that’s been my experience with other titles as well. If the GPU isn’t being fully utilized to max out a game’s engine, then the GPU won’t ramp up its core clock frequency towards max.



I found Assassin's Creed Valhalla to be a good test because it pushed the card to almost 100% usage, it didn't reach my monitors max hz (98FPS average on a 165 Hz monitor) and the power draw was 300-320W. 
 
This had my card at lower temperatures and it boosted upwards. I found that at +120W, I need to at least turn my voltage slider up 50% and it hasn't crashed in either ACV or Warzone. I haven't crashed since I moved to +120. 
 
 

I do have AC Valhalla, but haven’t played it yet. Sounds like a good opportunity to do so in the near future.

I usually max out the voltage slider when applying an overclock. Oh, and Port Royal surprisingly crashed with +120/+1250. Running it again now with +1200 memory. Not sure why it was able to handle higher core and memory earlier, but not lower clock speeds. That’s VRAM for you. Some modules just don’t like some frequencies.


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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 17:01:08 (permalink)
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I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 

I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 

When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 

That's my advice. 

+1

Funny you say that about War Zone. It randomly crashes for me at +150, so I have to downclock it to +125. It’s the only game that’s given me crap so far.



Yeah, continue to test lower powered games. And +125 is really +120. Remember it's in increments of 15. If you want to see this, open up the voltage curve. Type +120 and hit enter. Then type +125 and hit enter. I bet you curve just falls back down to +120?

I’ve been benchmarking for more realistic gaming performance, and I found that +165/+1350 is the sweet spot. However, we both know that games like War Zone, as we discussed, can have a negative impact. I may also drop my overclock to +120 and see how it runs with +1350.

On an unrelated note, is anyone else having issues with games randomly minimizing to the desktop? This only recently started for me, and I get the impression it’s from the latest round of Windows updates. It’s even doing it when benchmarking which crashes the benchmark when it does this. So annoying.



I was able to play a few games at +165 for hours no problem. The reason, it's because the games power limited the card and made the clocks drop down so I was actually stable at that voltage. 

Playing games that don't require as much power can, again as I explained earlier, cause boost to shoot your clocks up, become unstable and crash. 

I guess you can do a profile for certain games. For me, I don't want to have to switch between profiles, so I decided to just stick to +120 for convenience reasons. I'm not really missing that +45 Mhz, but I am missing out if my buddies and I are close to dubbing in Warzone and I get booted. It happened 3 times, so I said "screw the extra 45 Mhz!"

That’s my bottom line as well - not having to switch profiles. In all reality, those extra 45 MHz only equate to a couple of FPS in gaming performance. By the way, +120/+1350 didn’t seem like it was cutting it, but I did just pass a +120/+1250 Time Spy stress test at 99.1%. It’s looking like our cards are pretty much evenly matched.



Time Spy and Port Royal stress test only tell you how your card is power limited. Being power limited doesn't stress test your card at the max clocks and lowest voltage point on a curve. If you look at my previous post here:

Also, here are my stress test, +165/+1250 running 20 loops straight each
https://www.3dmark.com/tsst/2021793
https://www.3dmark.com/prst/109334

And again, I found later that lower powered games caused me to crash. So I would only rely on these stress test for one type of test, when your card TDP is being pushed to the max. 



What are you using to test the lowest point with? Also, most of the games I play that don’t max out a GPU’s power also don’t always ramp up the core clock if the game environment isn’t that demanding. Occasionally, I play Star Wars: The Old Republic, for example, and a lot of times the card sits between 1800-1900 MHz. Of course, that’s now just about a decade-old title, and not very demanding by today’s standards. But, that’s been my experience with other titles as well. If the GPU isn’t being fully utilized to max out a game’s engine, then the GPU won’t ramp up its core clock frequency towards max.



I found Assassin's Creed Valhalla to be a good test because it pushed the card to almost 100% usage, it didn't reach my monitors max hz (98FPS average on a 165 Hz monitor) and the power draw was 300-320W. 
 
This had my card at lower temperatures and it boosted upwards. I found that at +120W, I need to at least turn my voltage slider up 50% and it hasn't crashed in either ACV or Warzone. I haven't crashed since I moved to +120. 
 
 

I do have AC Valhalla, but haven’t played it yet. Sounds like a good opportunity to do so in the near future.

I usually max out the voltage slider when applying an overclock. Oh, and Port Royal surprisingly crashed with +120/+1250. Running it again now with +1200 memory. Not sure why it was able to handle higher core and memory earlier, but not lower clock speeds. That’s VRAM for you. Some modules just don’t like some frequencies.



Is your GPU warmed up now? It can be due to the heat. 
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 17:02:06 (permalink)
https://www.3dmark.com/pr/1139905
 
Port Royal 
14,766 which is 5 measly points off the best score for a 5900X and RTX 3080Ti I just couldn't get there.
 
+195 core +600 MEM
 
Interestingly, my scores start going down above +600 on the MEM. At +1095 they absolutely tank and my score is cut in half or worse. MEM junction never goes above 66C. Not sure what's up.
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 17:29:38 (permalink)
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I must have won the silicon lottery, as I’m stable at +200/+1200 (benchmarking). I’m not quite done yet, but I’ve already taken the #1 spot for Time Spy, Fire Strike, and Port Royal for a 9900K / 3080 Ti combo. I’m stable at +150/+1000 for gaming, but that was literally my starting point. Haven’t experimented with higher clocks for gaming yet.



+200 is probably +195, it goes by multiples of 15 MHz. 

I highly recommend not just stress testing at at high loads, but testing games with low loads that will shoot your clocks up because of boost. My card is very similar to yours, +195/ +1250. I was gaming at +165/ +1250 no problem on high loads. I even passed several stress test. 

When it came time to playing Warzone and Assassin's creed Valhalla, games that only need 300W, I saw my card run very cool like in the low 50s. Next thing I know, boost added +30 Mhz to my clocks and it caused me to crash. I lowered it to +120 now because of lower power draw games. 

That's my advice. 

+1

Funny you say that about War Zone. It randomly crashes for me at +150, so I have to downclock it to +125. It’s the only game that’s given me crap so far.



Yeah, continue to test lower powered games. And +125 is really +120. Remember it's in increments of 15. If you want to see this, open up the voltage curve. Type +120 and hit enter. Then type +125 and hit enter. I bet you curve just falls back down to +120?

I’ve been benchmarking for more realistic gaming performance, and I found that +165/+1350 is the sweet spot. However, we both know that games like War Zone, as we discussed, can have a negative impact. I may also drop my overclock to +120 and see how it runs with +1350.

On an unrelated note, is anyone else having issues with games randomly minimizing to the desktop? This only recently started for me, and I get the impression it’s from the latest round of Windows updates. It’s even doing it when benchmarking which crashes the benchmark when it does this. So annoying.



I was able to play a few games at +165 for hours no problem. The reason, it's because the games power limited the card and made the clocks drop down so I was actually stable at that voltage. 

Playing games that don't require as much power can, again as I explained earlier, cause boost to shoot your clocks up, become unstable and crash. 

I guess you can do a profile for certain games. For me, I don't want to have to switch between profiles, so I decided to just stick to +120 for convenience reasons. I'm not really missing that +45 Mhz, but I am missing out if my buddies and I are close to dubbing in Warzone and I get booted. It happened 3 times, so I said "screw the extra 45 Mhz!"

That’s my bottom line as well - not having to switch profiles. In all reality, those extra 45 MHz only equate to a couple of FPS in gaming performance. By the way, +120/+1350 didn’t seem like it was cutting it, but I did just pass a +120/+1250 Time Spy stress test at 99.1%. It’s looking like our cards are pretty much evenly matched.



Time Spy and Port Royal stress test only tell you how your card is power limited. Being power limited doesn't stress test your card at the max clocks and lowest voltage point on a curve. If you look at my previous post here:

Also, here are my stress test, +165/+1250 running 20 loops straight each
https://www.3dmark.com/tsst/2021793
https://www.3dmark.com/prst/109334

And again, I found later that lower powered games caused me to crash. So I would only rely on these stress test for one type of test, when your card TDP is being pushed to the max. 



What are you using to test the lowest point with? Also, most of the games I play that don’t max out a GPU’s power also don’t always ramp up the core clock if the game environment isn’t that demanding. Occasionally, I play Star Wars: The Old Republic, for example, and a lot of times the card sits between 1800-1900 MHz. Of course, that’s now just about a decade-old title, and not very demanding by today’s standards. But, that’s been my experience with other titles as well. If the GPU isn’t being fully utilized to max out a game’s engine, then the GPU won’t ramp up its core clock frequency towards max.



I found Assassin's Creed Valhalla to be a good test because it pushed the card to almost 100% usage, it didn't reach my monitors max hz (98FPS average on a 165 Hz monitor) and the power draw was 300-320W. 

This had my card at lower temperatures and it boosted upwards. I found that at +120W, I need to at least turn my voltage slider up 50% and it hasn't crashed in either ACV or Warzone. I haven't crashed since I moved to +120. 



I do have AC Valhalla, but haven’t played it yet. Sounds like a good opportunity to do so in the near future.

I usually max out the voltage slider when applying an overclock. Oh, and Port Royal surprisingly crashed with +120/+1250. Running it again now with +1200 memory. Not sure why it was able to handle higher core and memory earlier, but not lower clock speeds. That’s VRAM for you. Some modules just don’t like some frequencies.



Is your GPU warmed up now? It can be due to the heat. 




Quoting this quote because it's a big one and looks fun.  Please trim the fat folks.

GPU: EVGA GeForce RTX 3080 Ti FTW3 ULTRA HYBRID

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kevinc313
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Re: 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra Overclocking Results 2021/07/23 17:38:30 (permalink)
CSPlayer089
Honestly not much point in OC'ing this card.
 
Here's my Timespy results. Very small OC. +25mhz core and +800MHz memory.
 
Stock 10900k
Mushkin Redline DDR4-3600 16-19-19-39
 
https://www.3dmark.com/spy/21458388




Eh, IMHO it's worth throwing +120 to +180 at the air cooled card because between boost 4.0 pulling clock due to heat and riding the power limit like a pony, it's not going to get above 2,100mhz in 4K gaming loads and should stay pretty stable. There will be gains with the card spending time in the 1,995-2,100mhz range, with little downside, as long as you can keep the card running about 70C at 425w sustained with good air cooling.
post edited by kevinc313 - 2021/07/23 17:41:16
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