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  1. #1
    Helium Chilled MarshallR@ASUS +20 MarshallR@ASUS's Avatar
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    A Simple Guide To Overclocking Your Graphics Card With GPU Tweak

    2012 is an exciting time to need a graphic card upgrade. New PCI-Express 3 cards have hit the market and include the Nvidia GeForce GTX 600 series, such as the recent GTX 680, and AMD’s Radeon HD 7000 Series, including ASUS designed cards such as the Radeon HD 7970 DirectCU II, 7950 DirectCU II and 7870 DirectCU II as well as their TOP pre-overclocked variants.

    While these cards fill the news and people’s upgrade anticipations right now, you don’t need PCI-Express 3.0 or even the latest series of graphics cards to overclock though – generally speaking any graphics card can be overclocked in some way. This guide explains the process of how to overclock your graphics card with GPU Tweak, and applies to Nvidia and AMD graphics cards alike.


    The Radeon HD 7970 DirectCU II TOP has an upgraded PCB designed by ASUS engineers, giving it potentially more overclocking overhead.

    Downloads you will need:
    First of all download the latest version of ASUS GPU Tweak and AMD Catalyst drivers to get support for the latest models. For CrossFireX setups also download the latest version of CAP.

    What is ASUS GPU Tweak?
    GPU Tweak allows you to optimize clock speeds, voltage and fan speeds on up to four graphics cards independently or simultaneously, you can also select between GPU Tweak’s Standard or Advanced modes depending on your level of experience.



    A good stress test to push your overclock stability is FurMark, while GPU-Z is a must and is included with the ASUS GPU Tweak; however you can also download the latest version separately as an ROG Skinned GPU-Z.

    What is FurMark?
    FurMark is an OpenGL-based GPU stress test utility (also called GPU burn-in test). It makes it possible to push the GPU to the max in order to test the stability of the graphics card (and the PSU too!) leading to maximum GPU and VRM temperatures. That’s why FurMark is often used by overclockers and graphics cards fanatics to validate an overclocking, to test a new VGA cooler or to check the max power consumption of a video card.

    Before we start
    Open which ever version of GPU-Z you are using. Select the sensor tab, look at the bottom and tick both the boxes. You will be prompted to select a default location for the log file it will be creating. Why do we want this? Well if the overclock fails it is handy to look at the logged file and see what the possible cause of the failure was, as if your system freezes up you cannot check what you’re GPU temperatures were when the system froze. This way we can check the history and then make informed calls on the correct way forward.



    Create a baseline
    Open your FurMark stress test – Select the profile you wish to run, I suggest you use the profile that will match as close to your gaming resolution. I used the 1920×1080 (1080p) setting. Remember the point of this exercise is to establish knowledge of the baseline stability of your graphic card at stock speeds. You can use any of the pre-set profiles too, as long as you are using the same settings each time we do a stability test.



    Once we have these temperature numbers and are confident that the card is running perfectly at stock speeds, then we can overclock!

    First: Memory Overclocking
    The first thing to do is see what the maximum memory frequency is.



    Open GPU Tweak
    Either move the slider for the memory to up by 100MHz using the mouse, the keyboard arrow keys, or directly key in a value 100MHz higher. The offset value will tell you how far from stock MHz it’s been changed.
    Apply the setting.
    Open FurMark and run the benchmark preset that you prefer.
    If your system passes, increase the frequency by 100MHz on the slider again.
    Apply and run FurMark again
    Repeat until your system fails the benchmark test or crashes.
    Drop back 100MHz from the last used setting using the slider
    Run the benchmark again to check
    If passed successfully stop there and record the frequency that your system passed the benchmark test successfully at.
    Reset GPU Tweak to default
    We are not going to change any voltages in this basic guide until the very end. We now have the stand alone maximum memory frequency for our graphics card. It is actually unlikely that we will achieve this frequency when the GPU core is overclocked as well (due to reasons such as EMI, power draw, and induced heat from the GPU affecting the GDDR5 chips and PCB tracing, but what we do have is a known range within which we can work.
    Richard Swinburne
    ROG HQ
    Innovate. Never Imitate.

    When I get reeeally sad about missing someone far away, I just take a deep cleansing breath, then switch to the rifle with a scope.

  2. #2
    Helium Chilled MarshallR@ASUS +20 MarshallR@ASUS's Avatar
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    GPU Core
    The next thing we are going to do is see what our maximum GPU frequency is.



    Open GPU Tweak
    Either move the slider for the GPU to up by 10MHz using the mouse, the keyboard arrow keys, or directly key in a value 10MHz higher. The offset value will tell you how far from stock MHz it’s been changed.
    Apply the setting.
    Open FurMark and run the benchmark preset that you prefer.
    If your system passes, increase the frequency by 10MHz on the slider again.
    Apply and run FurMark again
    Repeat until your system fails the benchmark test or crashes.
    Drop back 10MHz from the last used setting using the slider
    Run the benchmark again to check
    If passed successfully stop there and record the frequency that your system passed the benchmark test successfully at.
    Once again we have is a known frequency that our GPU can achieve, but yet without voltage changes.

    Putting the Core and Memory together
    Now the moment of truth: putting them both together. Most of the time it will not be possible to get the max core frequency and the max memory frequency that we achieved separately to be stable at the same time, but we will try and get as close as possible.

    Open GPU Tweak
    Leave the GPU core voltage linked to GPU frequency (this is the default setting)
    Move the slider for the core to 50MHz below your maximum previously achieved
    Move the slider for the memory to 200MHz below your maximum previously achieved
    Open FurMark and run the benchmark preset that you have selected
    Optional: If your system still passes, repeat 2-4 but increasing the core up by 10MHz and memory by 25MHz each time.
    If your system passes, run the 15 minutes burn in test and keep an eye on your temperatures.
    You have a stable overclock of your graphic card at close to the maximum that can be achieved without any additional voltages or special cooling.
    If your overclock did not pass the FurMark stress test then do the following.

    Open GPU Tweak
    Move the slider for the core to 75MHz below your maximum previously achieved
    Move the slider for the memory to 200MHz below your maximum previously achieve
    Open FurMark and run the benchmark preset that you have selected
    If your system passes run the 15 minutes burn in test.
    You have a stable overclock of your graphic card at close to the maximum that can be achieved without any additional voltages or special cooling.
    But wait there is more
    At present we have the GPU core voltage and the GPU frequency linked in GPU Tweak. This works but it is less than ideal as it’s a bit overprovisioned. Normally we can reduce the amount of voltage needed to achieve what we currently have. Here is how we are going to find that out.



    If you have an ASUS graphics card, unlink the Voltage/Frequency by clicking on the little lock symbol, otherwise it will already be unlinked.
    Ensure your Graphic Core frequency remains at the final stable overclock achieved
    Reduce the voltage by small increments: I use 10mV steps.
    So if your voltage was at 1.050V reduce to 1.040V
    Run the FurMark test and if passes, lower the voltage again
    Repeat until your system does not pass
    Increase your voltage by one 10mV from the previous value
    Optional: Run FurMark to double-check.
    You are done! Enjoy your overclocked graphic card. Please post GPU-Z screen shots with your best stable overclock and include the voltages you have used.
    Richard Swinburne
    ROG HQ
    Innovate. Never Imitate.

    When I get reeeally sad about missing someone far away, I just take a deep cleansing breath, then switch to the rifle with a scope.

  3. #3
    ROG Guru: White Belt Loud & Fast +10 Loud & Fast's Avatar
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    Hi there, I have done what I`ve been told. But there is a öittle problem understanding "stable". Furmark runs clean over 1 hour, but ingame, the graphic driver resets the OC to stock value after a few seconds/minutes. The same In Furmark if I choose an other solution. This could be a driver problem, because I`m still running the 275.xx and you can see that physix is disabled. Can`t update the driver because of an "%1 is not...." message. I have to wait for my new HDDs to solve this. Here are the pics:
    furmark_000001.jpg

    PICT2217.jpg
    Last edited by Loud & Fast; 04-13-2012 at 04:48 PM.

  4. #4
    Helium Chilled MarshallR@ASUS +20 MarshallR@ASUS's Avatar
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    If it's still unstable in games drop it off a bit more. It seems like you're almost there.
    Richard Swinburne
    ROG HQ
    Innovate. Never Imitate.

    When I get reeeally sad about missing someone far away, I just take a deep cleansing breath, then switch to the rifle with a scope.

  5. #5
    ROG Enthusiast f1schu +10
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    Lovin my Asus DC2 6950, have done the 6970 shader unlock and used GPU Tweak to overclock my card to 980/5500 from the stock 810/5000 clocks.
    I haven't used FurMark to test stability tho as I prefer to use games like BF3 to real world test stability instead and so far using the 980/5500 overclock with a voltage of 1.256v I've had 0 issues, temps on all 3 cores never exceed 68'c.
    I saved the overclock to profile 2 and left profile 1 at default so that I can have stock settings when im not gaming (profile 1) and a simple click on profile 2 when its game time xD

    Tested with 3DMark 2011 and BF3 with ultra settings (constant 75FPS @1080p

    Profile 1 (default)


    Profile 2 (overclock)


    Profile 2 custom fan speed
    Chassis: Sharkoon T9. - MB: Asus Maximus Gene-Z. - CPU: Intel Core i7 2600k @ 4.6Ghz. - HSF: Thermaltake Frio.
    Memory: 8GB Corsair Vengeance (Red) 1600Mhz. - GPU: Asus Directcu II HD6950 + Shader unlock @ 980/5500Mhz.
    PSU: Novatech 550w Modular. - Storage: 1x OCZ Vertex Plus 60G SSD + 2x Western Digital 80G HDD.
    OS: Windows 7 Ultimate x64.

  6. #6

    crossfire 6950

    hi this is my first post on what seems to be a great site, i have a question about overclocking my hd6950 c/f i have noticed they have a different bios will this make any difference to o/c.
    __________________________________________________ ______________________________
    Display device : MSI R6950 Twin Frozr III PE on Cayman GPU
    Display driver : 7.14.10.0903, Catalyst 12.3
    On-board memory : 2048MB
    BIOS : 013.011.000.007
    GUID : VEN_1002&DEV_6719&SUBSYS_24611462&REV_00&BUS_1&DEV_0&FN_0
    Multi-GPU role : master

    GPU2
    __________________________________________________ ______________________________
    Display device : MSI R6950 Twin Frozr II on Cayman GPU
    Display driver : 7.14.10.0903, Catalyst 12.3
    On-board memory : 2048MB
    BIOS : 013.011.000.001
    GUID : VEN_1002&DEV_6719&SUBSYS_24601462&REV_00&BUS_6&DEV_0&FN_0
    Multi-GPU role : synchronized with master

  7. #7
    ROG Enthusiast JimmyH +10 JimmyH's Avatar
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    Why Can't I Adjust The Voltage

    I have followed all the instruction but am having problems. My GTX-680 seems to be set at the minimum voltage and won't let me change it.

    Capture.PNG

    Is it the card??


    CPU i7 3770 @ 4.7 GHz : MB Maximus V Formula : 4 x 4 Gb Corsair 1866
    Asus GTX 680 : SSD OCZ Vertex 4 256GB & OCZ:Vector 256 GB in RAID 0
    500GB Velocerapter, PSU Antec 900 w
    Case Coolermaster HAF X, Cooling : Corsair H100i

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