Mobile GPU Overclocking & Tuning - An Investigation & Introduction to MSI Afterburner - Part 2

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 22

  • @GiuseppeFamiani2209
    @GiuseppeFamiani2209 2 роки тому

    awesome explanation... i was already doing this myself since 2 years but with your explanation i understandood such many thing like why i wasn't even to see voltages under 700mv on my 2070s 115w, now i will definitly re-do my undervolt config taking into consideration the rest of the curve istead of the flatline from 700mv (my lowest voltage basically in the stock curve)

  • @leovbernardo
    @leovbernardo 3 роки тому +2

    You're brilliant!!! You should have already expected that my opinion is to go for the OC/UV option (

    • @leovbernardo
      @leovbernardo 3 роки тому

      @3DAndStuff Hey buddy, if you don't mind the question, how did you manage to get all the FPS statistics on the RTSS overlay at 9:44 for the FurMark benchmark test? I enabled FPS, FPS min avg max 1% low in Afterburner monitoring tab, but it didn't work. I also tried to give each individual statistic a group name, no luck. Sorry for asking this basic question... thanks!

    • @leovbernardo
      @leovbernardo 3 роки тому

      Nevermind man! Just realized that if you don't start the benchmark, it does not generate these statistics to be shown. I got it sorted out now. Thanks!

    • @TechModLab
      @TechModLab  3 роки тому +1

      @@leovbernardo Yep exactly :) And if you want GPU Power Readings you need to load the HWInfo.dll in the Overlay Tab of Afterburner, then go on customize and add GPU Power manually. Please note that HWInfo needs to run in the background to enable the data streaming.

    • @leovbernardo
      @leovbernardo 3 роки тому

      @@TechModLab Thank you! I managed to get GPU Power thru HWInfo OSD RTSS settings, but setting up all parameters via MSI Afterburner is easier. Just fixed according to your suggestion. BTW, I followed your guidance and managed to OC/UV my RTX 2070 to settings very similar to yours (VCore @ 1605MHz @ 0.725V and 12GHz Vmem) in order to limit CPU power to 85/95W. However, while playing CS:GO, I noticed a weird behaviour: the GPU tries to keep its power as set up in Afterburner, but it does not "stick". It keeps pushing 115W @ 1V to the GPU... Have you experienced this as well? Maybe it is due to BIOS and/or EC different versions (mine are 1.07.06TEI and 1.07.03, respectively). Thanks!

    • @leovbernardo
      @leovbernardo 3 роки тому

      @3DAndStuff What is very interesting is that Time Spy follows exactly the limits you set to core clock and voltage in Afterburner. CS:GO manages to somehow drain more power, increasing the clock and voltage constantly with peaks at 2100MHz and 1.069V, respectively. Did you notice something similar when you tested SOTTR?

  • @Vonliktenstien
    @Vonliktenstien 3 роки тому +1

    Awesome stuff man, thanks so much for all the info!

  • @happygiraffe9787
    @happygiraffe9787 3 роки тому

    This will be very handy when Ryzen 5600 + Rtx 3060/70 XMG laptops go live.

  • @alexzanderthegeek
    @alexzanderthegeek 3 роки тому

    Awesome info!

  • @bengun1111
    @bengun1111 3 роки тому

    Hello, your videos are very helpful, thank you) Can you please share the dimensions of those thermal pads that you changed on your vram?

    • @TechModLab
      @TechModLab  3 роки тому +1

      Hey thank you :) they are 1mm thick. Other dimensions are GDDR6 default.

    • @bengun1111
      @bengun1111 3 роки тому

      Thank you for your time! I cant wait for your new video.

  • @gnev112
    @gnev112 3 роки тому

    May I ask one more question? I use control center to undervolting. But in game (cyberpunk example) I have short moment, when setting set to default and temperatures go to 90-94 (65-75W ryzen 3600) for second then undervolting come back and I have 75-76 C most of the time. Is it so bad that I have these temperatures peaks? It's about 2-3 times an hour. Mostly when game start and close.
    I know that I can use ryzen master to undervolt, but I can't delite control center because it has keyboard light control inside.

    • @TechModLab
      @TechModLab  3 роки тому

      you can deactivate the control center and stil luse the keyboard led app ("LED keyboard setting"). It will still work. Do deactivate the ControlCenter properly you have to deactivate it in Windows services. Then use ZenStates or ClockTuner for Ryzen to make use of ManualOC.
      High temperatures above 90°C on 1CCD processors forsome seconds are normal. Make sure the processor comes back to normal temperatures (

    • @gnev112
      @gnev112 3 роки тому

      ​@@TechModLab I only can find Control Center Hotkey Service and HotKey Clipboard Service. Is it all, or there are more services? If it's not, then how deactivate and find rest of them? Is there instruction or something else for it. I found this forum.notebookreview.com/threads/remove-clevo-control-centers-cpu-oc-component-completely-x170sm-g.834715/ but i think it's to deep, isn't it? Maybe there is another way to deactivate CCC and left LEDks? Thank you for answer.

    • @TechModLab
      @TechModLab  3 роки тому +1

      @@gnev112 control center hotkey service only.

  • @gnev112
    @gnev112 3 роки тому

    Hello, is it fine if my cpu fan rotate about 30% and gpu 40% in idle? I did uv/oc on cpu and gpu both. I have good temperature, but my fans work constantly. Can it hurt them? And how much is yours cpu temperature in idle? Sorry for bad english.

    • @TechModLab
      @TechModLab  3 роки тому +1

      CPU fan should be at 20% in idle. 40% GPU fan is normal. No it can't hurt them. Fans are made to rotate 24/7. My CPU idle temperature is at around 54°C in idle. Which is normal too. The fans spin slowly so the temperature is a bit higher than it could be. But we don't want to have loud notebooks in idle, right? So, relax, everything is fine ;)

    • @gnev112
      @gnev112 3 роки тому

      @@TechModLab thanks for your answer!