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Hi , idk what happened but mem clock and gpu clock is high and temperatures are 40-50 even if i am doing nothing , is it a problem of msi afterburner or ?? please help fix it.
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I have seen a lot of posts saying pascal was 1.094v but not much on Turing. I also saw somebody say on here nvida is on the record saying anything under 1.064v I haven’t been able to confirm that. I also saw Nvidia say on a game or nexus interview turning the voltage slider up to 100% could reduce lifespan to one year but I hope that’s just them covering their butt. Some of you may recognize me from my other posts but a quick recap: I have an aorus 2070 super. I didn’t have the luck I had hoped manually overclocking with offsets, I can get +25 core at 2010mhz and +800memory before I start to get errors on OCCT 3D test. I found better results using the voltage frequency curve. My card runs mostly 1.050 stock and there I can turn it to 2070mhz and +800memory and not really worry sense that is what it does normally. However I can get up to 2100mhz at about 1.068v , and Maybe more but I stop there until I found out what safe long-term voltage is. I understand this varies card to card and model to model but I was looking for a general safe consensus. I also don’t get errors in OCCT when I use the curve this way , not really sure why but I think it has to do with I hit power limits instantly in that test which drops the voltage no matter what down to around 900 making higher clocks unstable. I guess when I only changed one point on the voltage frequency curve if I can’t do that it just goes back to what it normally does, but I’m no expert maybe you’ll know ? It may be worth mentioning to that one of the selling points if this car was “ Built for Extreme Overclocking 12+2 Power Phases” As opposed to nvidia 8+2. What is this really has any effect on lifespan at high voltage is I don’t know. Thank you for any help in advance !
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I noticed that my GPU is getting really loud (jet engine loud) while I play demanding games, so I wanted to adjust the fan curves to bring the noise levels down a bit. Using MSI Afterburner I set the following settings and called it a day since I noticed that fans are quieter even with just browsing the web, however when I start an AAA game i.e Apex Legends and the GPU temps hit around 75 ° C my custom fan curve is being overwritten and fans go apeshit just like before (3200-3400 RPM) which is basically 100% fan speed. What is weird in this situation is that Afterburner Hardware monitor is showing different things when it comes to FAN SPEED and RPM, Fan speed according to AHM is around 50% (which is what it should be according to my custom fan curve BUT the RPM goes to 3400 which actually is 100% fan speed. I'm running: -Asus ROG Strix RTX 2080 ti 011g gaming -Latest Nvidia drivers version 451.67 What I tried already: Having "Auto" in the Afterburner on and off, same results with RPM going to 3400 Saving profiles in the Afterburner and Applying it Turning everything off, reinstalling drivers and afterburner, rebooting PC multiple times Using different software than Afterburner like GPU TwaekII from ASUS (exactly same results) Since the fan curves work until I start playing a demanding game I guess there must be something that has priority and is changing the RPM of the fans when a GPU hits a certain temperature regardless of what my settings in Afterburner are so I tried looking for any software that could be responsible but there is nothing I can find. Any ideas on what can I do here?
- 8 replies
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- gpu
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So I have a Palit GTX 1660 Super GamingPro OC and undervolted it, after lots of time testing and checking for stability I managed to find a stable undervolt, keeping the same level of performance and achieving my goal of reducing temps so that I can also reduce fan noise. So, MSI afterburner keeps changing the entire curve after restart or cold boot(I've already turned on start on windows and apply on windows startup), I've read this is due to GPU boost that it is gonna boost higher when it is given headroom and goes down when it reaches a temp limit. I already have an factory OC'ed card so essentially what I've done is down clocked the card(still overclocked though but I want to reduce or limit it's "over clock") and undervolt it. After testing multiple times for 3 days, I got to a stable 1920Mhz at 875mV for about 7 hours gameplay but most of the time its afk, but I know this won't reflect actual game play so in those 7 hours, I have about 4 hours of afk and 3 hours of playing at a certain point in the game where I know my gpu has to actually "work hard". At this point, I found my stable voltage and frequency. Thanks to GPU boost, like I said, it changes the curve so I tried to work my way around it by applying to a lower frequency at the same voltage since I know that it's going to change up after a restart/boot so that when it changes, it changes to the frequency and voltage that I want. The problem is, the "apply on windows start up" applies the last applied profile on MSI AB, say I applied profile X, then after a restart, it changes again automatically so that would now be X' and X' would now be the "last profile applied" then after another restart or cold boot, now its profile X" and so on. So, after this long post, my question is, is there a way to set AB to just keep applying profile X instead of using the logic of last profile applied? Since my desired undervolt and frequency wont be consistent as it keeps changing after every boot.
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Hi, i uninstalled my RTSS and tried to reinstall it and it gives me this error that RTSS is still active? My afterburner is turned off, all of the monitoring is disabled, RTSS removed, how is it still active? My guess is to delete the temporary files but i cannot identify which folder belongs to RTSS? I use Nvidea GTX 1070 (if it matters)
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I already asked this question on r/undervolt subreddit. But I haven't got any proper answer. I know what undervolting is and the other basic stuff. I undervolted my CPU with Intel XTU. It was straightforward (just setting the voltage offset). I wanted to do the same with my GPU. Most of the guides I read/tutorials I watched were using MSI Afterburner. The process (as you may already know) involves adjusting a curve on a graph. Nobody explained how it would affect the voltage of the GPU. X was voltage and Y was frequency. I understand it represents the GPU will run at "y" MHz at "x" mV and x is variable at a given time. But I always thought that a constant voltage is applied through a digital circuit. That's how I understood CPU undervolting. It always runs at X volts with variable frequency at a given time and adjusted it run at (X - a) volts to reduce the heat output. This is why GPU undervolt doesn't make sense to me. OK. Let's say that the circuit is running at variable voltage. But the process only involves changing the frequency (Y) value. How does it change the overall voltage applied through the GPU? Doesn't changing the frequency affect the performance of the GPU? Is there anything that I'm missing about basic electronic physics? Also Is there any "one-click" undervolt tool for GPUs, like XTU? All I had to do there was set the offset. Thanks in advance.
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Should MSI Afterburner's OC Scanner (generates a curve), be scanned before or after increasing the memory clock? For my situation the memory clock max that works is: 700 MHz for Destiny 2, Fallout 4, and Tomb Raider 600 MHz for Dragon Age Inquisition (game crashes on launch if higher)
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I just installed afterburner and Core Voltage, Power Limit, Temp. Limit, and Fan Speed are all locked. I have enabled "unlock voltage control" and "unlock voltage monitoring" in the settings. I have a thinkpad x1 extreme (gen1) with a gtx 1050 ti. If anyone can tell me how to unlock all these options, that would be great. Thx.
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I just installed afterburner and Core Voltage, Power Limit, Temp. Limit, and Fan Speed are all locked. I have enabled "unlock voltage control" and "unlock voltage monitoring" in the settings. I have a thinkpad x1 extreme (gen1) with a gtx 1050 ti. If anyone can tell me how to unlock all these options, that would be great. Thx.
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- overclocking
- tech support needed.
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How do you force an amd gpu to always be at one voltage?
Terry Tuna posted a topic in Graphics Cards
Afterburner CTRL+L doesn't seem to work. And I need to do this to see if my gpu will work fine like that, since when its under a certain voltage/frequency - most apps start glitching out. Using a MSI r9 390 8gb, drivers - latest (default windows drivers do work without doing this kinda stuff)- 12 replies
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Is MSI Afterburner the same on AMD and Nvidia, because i am getting different styles of numbers, i mean, on Nvidia there is +0 and on AMD it says by number. On AMD it shows the base clock, but on Nvidia not. Is it how its supposed to be?
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- msi afterburner
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So X-Plane has this cool overlay feature that shows your CPU vs GPU frame times. As I understand, this will definitively tell you if you are CPU or GPU bottle-necked, by indicating which of the two is spending more time processing each frame (on average). Shown here, we see the CPU is the clear bottle-neck, and is spending over 50% more time processing each frame. So my question is, does a similar application exist that will work with any game? When using something like Afterburner, you can easily spot a CPU bottleneck when your GPU is at low utilization. Similarly, if my GPU is close to 95%+ utilization, we can safely say that my GPU is the bottleneck. However, since most games cannot fully utilize all cores in most CPU's, how can one determine how severely your GPU is bottle-necking your CPU? For example, if my GPU is at 60% utilization, I know that (assuming the game is capable of full utilization) I am losing roughly 40% of my GPU's full potential. On the flip side, if my GPU is at 100%, and my (lets say quad core) CPU is running at 50% utilization, I can never be sure how much potential I am losing without knowing how capable the game is of utilizing my entire CPU. In this scenario, you could suggest reducing my resolution to remove my GPU bottleneck, and to then compare my frame rates (or CPU utilization) when my CPU is instead the bottle-neck. But wouldn't lowering the resolution still offload a small workload from my CPU? I understand I am probably overthinking this, but it seems like a tool like X-Plane's would be super useful for precisely (and quickly) measuring the severity of a GPU bottleneck. Honestly not sure if any of this makes sense. Been running off 30 seconds of sleep and a cereal bar for the past few days. But if anyone has a solution to this, or can at least correct my ignorance, it would be much appreciated EDIT: I also know I can just look at other benchmarks to determine how well a specific game can utilize any given CPU, but still, I think a tool like this would be easier.
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- bottle-neck
- frame rate
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Hey guys, I one problem I hope someone can help. I have a Rx 5500xt from msi (mech 4Gb) every time I try to change the core or memory clock and I press apply it goes back to normal. It shows me 2000mhz, when I change it to 2020 or more, press apply it goes back to 2000. However I can change my fan speeds or power limit. I tried to update drivers but still nothing, when I install the program from evga it won’t even open someone might know how to fix that? I’m really stuck on this one. 60796779764__F6F5C973-BA4D-4FEF-BB39-09C8EE4D7D89.MOV
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Hi, i have i7 9700k @5.00ghz @1.29v, LLC lvl 4 when playing games msi afterburner and hwinfo are reporting CPU temps 60-70 across all 8 cores. On the other hand ai suite is reporting 10 degrees lower which is lowering fans speed as im using ai suite fans control. Which one should i believe, i know temps in the 60s are safe but still i have 240mm aio and should have lower temps.
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Hello LTT Forum, i am coming to you since i have some problems with my new RTX 2070 Super. I just got this model from Gigabyte (the 8GB Gaming OC version) and it is running just fine and i can feel the upgrade from my 1060 6G (also from Gigabyte). The problem i am experiencing is that whenever i change any setting in MSI Afterburner or Aorus Engine the complete system freezes, its like it is suddenly under 100% load (but there is no load) until it just black screen's out and i have to hard reset. Dies does happen on any setting, also fan speed or anything else. The same goes for Aorus Engine (which is by gigabyte). Also the PCI-E PSU Power indicators are off (means stable psu according to the doc of the card). I am currently worried that there is something wrong with my card. It is advertised as around ~1800 MHz boost frequency but i am only getting a constant 1605 MHz under load. Did anyone else ever experience such problems? Should i return the card and get a different model? I am using the latest nvidia driver. latest msi afterburner, heck i even reinstalled windows 10 and reconfigured my whole machine just before i opened this post. Does anyone have a suggestion on what could be wrong? I am looking foreward for your answers ? Ps: Sorry for my grammar, i am not a native speaker.
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Hey all! I have an XFX 5700 XT Thicc III Ultra, and have read a number of threads about people's experiences with undervolting. The general sense I have is that doing so won't really impact performance much, but could significantly improve my fan noise and temperatures. Is this true? Should I use Afterburner to undervolt my card? And if so, by how much? :)
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Hello, I have an MSI AMD Radeon R9 390X GAMING 8GB and I have run it at stock it's whole life. Today I decided to use MSI Afterburner to try overclocking it to see how far I can push it. I got the GPU Core up to 1180MHz from 1050MHz and I got the Memory up to 1800MHz from 1500MHz. I had to crank the Power Limit to +50% (Max), the Core Voltage to +100 (Max) and the Auxiliary Voltage to +100 (Max) to get the card stable. Surprisingly the temperatures were fine and the card never hit it's thermal limit. My question: Is +100 on both the Core voltage and the Auxiliary voltage too much? Can I run this 24/7 like this? I ran Superposition benchmark, Minecraft, Rust, Rocket League, The Witcher 3 and Battlefield V several times for a while and noticed no artifacts or crashes (tried to test variety of DirectX 12, 11, 9 and OpenGL games). I noticed a decent performance boost (around 10% to 15% or so). If +100 is fine, is there an option to go even higher? (I have the power and thermal headroom). Any help is appreciated
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Hello, I have a problem as stated above. Its annoying me becauses my GPU fans are off when idle and from time to time start blasting at 70% . I sometimes leave my pc on for a night and its getting on my nerves. The curve will apply the second I turn the Afterburner on. My Oc stays even when the program is off but not the curve. Im using the latest built. Any ideas?
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Hey guys, so i play League of Legend, around on months ago all the stats were on the to left corner as they are in any other game (it's one more but i don't remember now) Now no matter what i do they wont show, no mater what i do, also with Riva Tuner, add all the .exe files.. nada Any one can help in this! Thanks!
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Hello guys. Where can I find the settings to replace the OSD text? I would like to specify the model of each component. Thank you
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So I have a friend who newly built a PC and I was following up with it. She installed Windows10 latest version, Nvidia drivers and everything including MSI Afterburner, and everything was working perfectly fine. Then she opened afterburner, left everything to default, and moved ONLY the clock and memory sliders all the way to the right and hit apply, then CLOSED it. The computer went to black screen and since then it doesn't even post. She tried to restart, turn it off and on, unplug the screen and then plug it in back, but no luck. Everything turns on including the screen but it stays completely black. The PC specs: Ryzen 5 3600 Asus TUF x570 wifi Motherboard ZOTAC GAMING GeForce RTX 2060 Twin Fan CORSAIR Vengeance LPX 16GB Samsung 970 EVO CORSAIR RMX Series (2018), RM650x The LED on the motherboard shows a white color which according to the manual it means an issue with VGA. Is there a solution to this or did she break something? SOLVED! Steps followed: Unplugged the PSU from the wall Had to take off the GPU to access the MB battery Took off the battery from the MB and waited for 10 minutes (just what NWC Pc benchmarks did) Put everything back and turned it on This time, it turned on and post Went to safe mode and uninstalled Afterburner (just what JayTwoCents did)
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I just finished overclocking my EVGA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Black Edition using MSI Afterburner by following the steps shown in Panjno's overclocking video on Youtube. I was able to achieve these results stably. However, after the completion of the overclock, I still have a few lingering questions, which I've listed below: 1. In the video, Panjno was able to achieve a power limit of of 120%, whereas mine is locked at 112%. Why is this? Is there any way I can increase my power limit further? 2. What is core voltage? The option is locked by defualt, and Panjno did not alter it in his video, but I am still curious about it. Is it relevant to the overclock?
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- rtx 2080 ti
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Hey , this might be a dumb question , but how do I change the voltage when overclocking a graphics card , as far as I can see afterburner only allows you to change core voltage (%) and dragging the slider up doesnt change much. How do I change the actual voltage (ie. 1.2mv to 1.3) and in what intervals should I change it when I find out how
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No matter what temperature limit in MSI Afterburner I set for my GTX 1080, it won't stick to It's currently set at 75 degrees but running at 81 degrees. I'm a bit stuck because temp limits work fine on my other card and had previously worked fine a few weeks ago. Temp limits are because of bitcoin mining just in case anyone was wondering why.