MOVED: MSI AFterburner & Ti Hawk

This topic has been moved to Overclockers & Undervolting & Modding Corner.
https://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?topic=154628.0

Yes you could potetntially improve the FPS by increasing the core clock. By how much, you will need to test in the specific game.
There are really 2 ways to go about finding the max core clock. Gradually increase the core until the card produces artifacts or crashes and then increase the voltage.
Or, max your core voltage and then increase the core clock gradually until your card crashes, and then reduce it slightly until its stable. Monitor the temps and see how that goes.

Similar Messages

  • MSI AFterburner & Ti Hawk

    How is one supposed to improve the GTX 560 Ti Hawk's performance further? I"m using MSI Afterburner and there are quite a few settings to manipulate. Which settings directly affects the performance of the game like frames per second (FPS). The memory clock speed defaults to 950. If i increase that to say, 985 or even 1000mhz will i be able to see any appreciable improvement in BF3?
    What about the voltage - how should i be setting the voltage to improve the game....???
    Now that i've got my Ti Hawk's GPU temps to really low level thanks to the Artic Acccelero Xtreme plus II cooler i feel more confident to push the card's performance. Before the Artic cooler the focus was to decrease noise/temps. This has been incredibly resolved by the Artic cooler so the next challenge is to see how i can improve the card's performance.

    Yes you could potetntially improve the FPS by increasing the core clock. By how much, you will need to test in the specific game.
    There are really 2 ways to go about finding the max core clock. Gradually increase the core until the card produces artifacts or crashes and then increase the voltage.
    Or, max your core voltage and then increase the core clock gradually until your card crashes, and then reduce it slightly until its stable. Monitor the temps and see how that goes.

  • MOVED: MSI Afterburner Issue

    This topic has been moved to MSI Video Cards.
    https://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?topic=174212.0

    Useless comment... removed. And topic locked.
    >>Please read and comply with the Forum Rules.<<

  • MOVED: msi afterburner underclocking my gpu

    This topic has been moved to MSI Video Cards.
    https://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?topic=162667.0

    nvidia or ati??
    http://nvidia.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/3130/~/setting-%22power-management-mode%22-from-adaptive-to-maximum-performance

  • MOVED: MSI Afterburner When OC my gpu it is touching 95c.Is it normal

    This topic has been moved to Overclockers & Modding Corner.
    https://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?topic=135410.0

    Quote from: J_C_9 on 14-March-10, 07:05:52
    Personally, I don't like running a GPU over 80C.  Someone implied that their (one year old card?) card hasn't died yet running hotter, but that is definitely no proof at all it won't die prematurely...
    Trust me, they are designed for it, check the whitepages on ATi or NVidia.
    Ive been running a 9800GTX for almost 30 months with temps reaching 85 Celsius regurlarly and it hasnt had a hickup yet.
    Must add thats its a pre oc-ed one and I never got it higher, tried, but didnt work.
    So to say it will die prematurely, is a bit shortsighted in my opion.
    Read the net and reviews and youll see it common nowadayds that gpu's run that hot, since gpu computing and gaming are getting more and more gpu intensive.
    Ill bet there are even people out there, that fold or grid on it and they run systems 24/7 for years and years with the same cards and having zero issues and they run temps around the 80's/85's too, just like on my system, especially if you have 2 or more cards on the same board.
    You really think that gpu manufacturers havent thought about it?
    As long as you dont fiddle with voltage tweaks, get a good case airflow and keep it under 90C youll be just fine.
    But thats mine opinion 

  • MSI 560GTX-Ti Hawk - Very high Memory Temp issue

    Ok, I really don't want to hijack the other thread, so I'll start my own. I installed my MSI 560GTX-Ti Hawk last night, and noticed extremely high memory temps while playing Dragon Age II. Tonight, I was able to investigate this a little further, and found that my memory temps will stay consistent for a while, and then spike suddenly. For example, I had DA2 running. I was just staring at the same location (not moving in-game). I had the mem temps on the on-screen display, and would look over every few minutes. For about 20 minutes, the memory temp was locked at about 60C. Then, all of the sudden, I had a reading of 95C. I alt-tabbed out to Afterburner, and saw that there was a sudden spike.
    There was no reason for this spike to occur (no voltage/clock/fan changes). However, once the temp spiked up, it didn't want to go down. After closing out the game, the temp would (VERY slowly) start to go down. After a while, the was a reverse spike, in which the temp dropped big time (opposite of how it went up). It almost seems as if the heatsink is coming out of contact with the memory after the temps have been high for a while, at which point the temps go REALLY high.
    Has anybody else experienced this? I am thinking of RMAing the board since I can duplicate this consistently, and it's not just a random freak occurrence. While I haven't had any problems with corruption in-game, I am thinking it might be best to swap out the board before problems occur.
    Thoughts?

    Quote from: Olly230 on 24-November-11, 16:13:02
    Check with another game - if it happens there as well
    RMA
    Haven't tried it on another game, but ran folding@home (GPU3), and it did the same thing. I think I am going to call Newegg and RMA it.
    Quote from: AbogadoUBA-USA on 24-November-11, 18:59:13
    what BIOS you have? for another way
    your GPU temp is too much high
    check your GPU ambient with AIDA64 playing 20 minutes, if you have a high GPU ambient temp, your problem is your case
    I don't know which BIOS I have. Whatever came with the card.
    The GPU temp topped out at 78C. That was at stock voltages, and running Dragon Age II with max settings (DX11, and all options cranked), with the video card's fans on "Silent Mode". I don't know the card that well, so I don't know if that is normal or not. Ambient in the room was about 72F. My case is an Antec P182. I have 2x120mm exhaust fans running.
    After adjusting the GPU core voltage, I could get the card down to about 71C in the same game, and the fan wouldn't spin up past 48% or so (virtually silent).
    It's the memory temps that are concerning me, and it particular, the way they seem to spike all of the sudden for no reason. I think I am going to RMA it, and see if my replacement card does the same.

  • How to use MSI Afterburner

    The MSI Afterburner is a great tool for monitoring your vga's health status as well as overclocking it including tweaking voltages.
    Monitoring
    In case you came her with a vga related problems you might be asked to tell about the load and idle temps of your vga.
    So first we focus on how to monitor temps.
    First we start Afterburner and see this.
    Just for monitoring we don't need the sliders visible as these are for tweaking/oc and we take care of that later. To the right there is a window with different graphs of all kinds of temps and voltages. There you can montiore the idle status but that won't really help you to see what happens in a game. You will only know about your temps under load in the moment your gaming and not when already leaving the game. At least the graphs will show the temps as a graph so you can read up temps of past times also but it is quite complicated to find the temp spike of the right time and read up the value.
    It's easier to have the temps and voltages displayed in the game with an OSD (note: OSD doesn't work in 64bit applications). To get that work you need to activate it.
    First click on "Settings"
    Now go to "monitoring" in the Settings menu
    In "Active hardware monitoring graphs" you can choose what should be displayed in OSD.
    On the left you have the possible graphs to be selected. When you click on a graph you activate it and the symbol next to it lights up. Now you have to choose the properties of that graph. That is done by clicking on "Show in On-Screen Display" or "Show in Logitech keyboard LCD Display" or "Show in tray icon". Choosing "Show in On-Screen Display" means the graph will be shown in the game while LCD means it will be shown on a supported LCD of a Logitech Keyboard (e.g. G510). These both options are therefor ideal to checkout load temps and voltages.
    Please note that there is also a graph for Famerate to be activated to even monitor FPS in games
    After setting the graphs you want to be displayed just click on "ok" and you are done. NOTE: Only graphs of sensors that can be read out can be selected. Some cards won't be able to support gpu voltage monitoring hence that graph can't be selected.
    If needed you can also add hotkeys for the OSD in On-Screen Display. By clicking on "More" you have the ability to mod the look and layout of the OSD as well as setting up profiles.
    Now after starting a game you can see the graphs selected displayed inside your game so you can see what happens while you are gaming and you can also find out how your vga's status will change in any game situation
    Fan control
    After monitoring temps you might have seen too high temps and want to lower them or you want more cooling in oc attempts. Also could be you saw low temps but your card is very noisy because of high fan speeds. All that could make it necessary to change the fan speed manually instead of auto control
    After deactivating  auto control by clicking on "Auto" you can move the slider between Min and Max to select the fan speed in %. Setting 68 therefor means fan will be running at 68% of it's full speed. After selecting click on "Apply" to apply the chosen fan speed.
    Besides a static speed you can also program a custom fan profile with clicking on "Fan" in "Settings" afterwards just deactivate auto control and activate "User Define"
    Checking stability with Kombustor
    Along with Afterburner the downloaded archive also contains Kombustor. Kombustor is a burn-in vga tool like Furmark which will apply very massive load to your vga and will reveal thermal and stability problems when letting it run for some time.
    After installing you can start it out of Afterburner by clicking on the "K" to left
    Overclocking and Overvolting
    With the Core Clock and Memory Clock sliders you can tweak the clockrates of the Gpu and the VRAM. The Mhz value selected adds or reduces the stock clockrates. That means e.g. setting +65 for Gpu will add 65Mhz to the stock clockrate. Setting -50Mhz will reduce the stock clockrate by 50Mhz. To apply your oc remember to always click on "Apply"
    Overvolting with the overvolting slider will work the same way what means what you set will be added to the stock voltage. Note that overvolting gpu on Kepler (GTX600) is limited on non unlocked cards (Lightning/Hawk) to the nvidia max of 1.175v and setting anything else will therefor be useless.
    If overvolting is greyed out and can't be changed you have to activate it in "Settings"/"General".
    Simply check "Unlock voltage control" and "Unlock voltage monitoring"
    NOTE: Despite mistakable informations on the web the only MSI Radeon 7850/7770 cards able to overvolt are R7850 Power Edition 2GD5/(OC) and R7770 Power Edition 1GD5/(OC). Due to technical restrictions all other 7850/7770 models can't be overvolted therefor overvoltage slider won't be available.
    Triple overvolting will only be available with Lightning, Hawk or Power Edition cards and is a unique MSI feature that won't work with any other manufacturers card.
    On supported cards you can access it (after enabling overvoltage, see above) when clicking on the grey symbol next to the voltage slider
    the voltage slider will then change to triple overvoltage (core/mem/aux)
    Note that triple overvoltage for Lightning and Power Edition GTX680 & GTX670 vgas will require Afterburner version 2.2.3, the latest GTX 660 & 650 cards will require Afterburner 2.2.4 or above. GTX680/770/780 Lightning users must use an unlocked Afterburner version for full triple overvoltage abilities (Nvidia gpu voltage limit). Until Version 3.0.0 Beta 17 a special SE variant was required. With 3.0.0 Beta 18 the SE version has been merged to the normal version. To unlock the advanced voltage settings simply go to "General" tab of the settings, check "unlock Voltage control and choose "extended MSI"
    Power Limit
    The Power Limit slider is only accessible on GTX600 or above cards as it is required to modify the unique GPU boost feature. GPU boost is nvidia's auto oc feature for Kepler cards and will increase clockrate when not reaching the pre-defined TDP value under load. With the Power limit slider you can change the TDP limit in %. Anything over 100% will extend the limit and enable the gpu to boost clockrate while already at 100% TDP.
    If the Power limit is not visible although you are using a GTX600 vga you chose the wrong afterburner skin in "Settings"/"User Interface" The Power Limit slider will only be visible with "Default MSI Afterburner Skin"
    ----> --->
    Temp Limit
    With the new GeForce GTX7xx / Titan series vgas came an enhanced version of the boost introduced with GTX6xx vgas. Boost 2.0 adds a Temp Limit to the previous Power Limit. So now the available boost is not only determined by the Power Limit but also by the set Temp limit. To change the Temp limit you need a supporting version of Afterburner (3.00 Beta 10 and above). Click on the down arrow next to the Power limit slider and Temp Limit becomes available.
    --->
    By default Temp limit is set to a target temp of 79°C what means anything below will allow max boost. Increasing Temp limit will allow boosting at higher temps. In standard configuration Power and Temp limit are linked what means increasing Power Limit will also increase Temp limit. If you want to change that and set individually uncheck "Link". Clicking on "Prioritize" you can decide if Temp or TDP Limit should be the primary factor to determine boost.
    Gaming APP
    Another thing which needs to be kept in mind is that maximum clockrates for the latest GeForce GTX7xx Gaming requires running >>Gaming APP<<. Switch to Gaming Mode (N770 TF 2GD5/OC (GeForce GTX 770 GAMING)) or OC Mode (N780 TF 3GD5/OC (GeForce GTX 780 GAMING)) to allow maximum boost clockrates.
    Oc Profiles and starting up with oc
    After tweaking clockrates, voltages and power limit you can setup five profiles with these values. Just click on a profile number followed by clicking save. Now you can change between your profiles by choosing the number of it.
    If you want to startup with the oc applied just click on "Apply overclocking at system startup" and make sure the green button left on that lights up in green.
    Dragon Army Skins
    A nice modification for Afterburner are the new MSI Gaming series skins to adapt to the latest MSI Gaming lineup: http://game.msi.com/
    Just download the skins >>here<< and copy them in your Skins folder in the MSI Afterburner main folder. After restarting Afterburner you can now choose the Dragon Army Skins in "Settings"/"User Interface". Dargon Army Skins are included by default from Afterburner 3.0.0 Beta 18 and above and can there be chosen like shown before.

    Version update
    Afterburner 4.0.0 final/stable is out. Click >>here<< for download.
    This is a new official version.
    SE version and normal are merged to one now
    Release info:
    Quote from: http://forums.guru3d.com/showpost.php?p=4905781&postcount=1
    Changes list includes:
    •   Added MSI R9 280 series voltage control support
    •   Added AMD Tonga graphics processors family support
    •   Added core voltage control for reference design AMD RADEON R9 285X series graphics cards with NCP81022 voltage regulators
    •   Added official overclocking limits extension support for AMD Tonga graphics processors. Please take a note that unofficial overclocking mode is currently not supported for AMD Tonga graphics processors family
    •   Various parts of hardware monitoring module have been pumped up to improve hardware monitoring usability and flexibility:
    o   Added layered monitoring graphs rendering mode. Now you may right click source graph in monitoring window, select “Attach” in the context menu then point to destination graph to attach source graph to it and create a group of layered graphs. This feature allows you to render as many layered graphs on the same grid as you wish. The colors of graphs in layered rendering mode can be customized independently of each other so you can easily identify them
    o   Added multi-column monitoring graphs rendering mode. Now you can adjust the number of graph columns in “Active monitoring graphs” section in “Monitoring” tab
    o   Added “Override graph name” option to “Monitoring” tab. Now you can rename the graphs displayed in hardware monitoring window
    o   Monitoring history buffer size is no longer defined by monitoring window width. Now pre-history buffer size is fixed and stores the last 3600 samples (1 hour for 1000ms polling period) for each graph
    o   Improved tray icon monitoring module:
    o   Now you can select either text mode or barchart indicator mode for each value displayed in tray icon. Barchart indicator mode can be extremely useful for visualizing data like GPU / CPU usage
    o   Improved Logitech keyboard LCD monitoring module:
    o   Ported to new Logitech API to provide support for newer Logitech LCD displays
    o   Added support for color LCD display of Logitech G19/G19s keyboards
    o   Added graph mode support for color LCD display of Logitech G19/G19s keyboards. Now in addition to previously available text mode you can optionally select graph mode and see exact copy of MSI Afterburner’s monitoring graphs displayed directly inside the keyboard LCD. You can also press “Menu” soft button on your Logitech G19/G19S keyboard to toggle between text and graph modes dynamically in realtime
    o   Added acceleration support to LCD scrolling implementation
    o   Added larger 8x12, 10x12, 12x12 and 12x16 fonts support for text mode
    •   Added “Regional settings” section to “User Interface” tab:
    o   Temperature format settings allow you to switch between Celsius and Fahrenheit format for monitored temperatures. Please take a note that this setting affects temperature readouts only. Hardware related temperature adjustments (e.g. fan speed to temperature mapping curve for all cards or temperature target adjustment for NVIDIA Kepler series) are always being displayed and adjusted in Celsius for maximum unification, safety and compatibility
    o   12 hours / 24 hours time format settings allow you to configure time format for On-Screen Display and hardware monitoring window
    •   Added “Enable low-level IO driver” option to the “Compatibility properties” section in “General” tab
    •   Added SLI sync performance limit graph for release 340 and newer NVIDIA drivers
    •   Display device enumeration implementation has been modified slightly to allow monitoring Intel iGPUs when low-level IO driver is not enabled
    •   Improved handshaking algorithm reduces the risk of seeing multiple running instances of child processes (e.g. RTSS)
    •   Optimized hardware polling for NVIDIA graphics cards
    •   Optimized hardware polling for multi-GPU systems
    •   Added SVI2 voltage control support via AMD ADL SDK to provide compatibility with future graphics cards
    •   Added automatic prerecording settings to “Videocapture” tab. When you enable automatic mode prerecording session is being started automatically on each 3D application startup. Please take a note that in this case you can still use video prerecord hotkey to stop then manually restart prerecording session if necessary
    •   Drastically improved skin engine:
    o   Improved skin compiler gives more detailed error messages when skin compilation fail due to error in some source image file
    o   Source image file format is no longer limited to 24-bit BMP files only. Now skin compiler supports all possible bit depths for BMP format and fully supports PNG format with alpha channel
    o   Added built-in bitmap effect for extracting alpha-channel from PNG image files
    o   Skin format has been upgraded to v1.3. New format supports alpha channel based transparency for skinned window, allowing skin designers to define semi-transparent skin areas, apply antialiasing to the skin window edges and so on
    o   Added new skinned window composition modes support and “Skin composition mode” settings to “User interface tab”. New settings allows you to use one of the following modes:
    o   Traditional mode – suits best for backward compatibility with existing skins and performance testing
    o   Layered mode with colorkey - provides much faster rendering of skins with non-rectangular window shape and additionally allows you to adjust transparency of skinned window
    o   Layered mode with alpha – provides per-pixel alpha channel support and advanced visual effects for compatible skins and also allows you to adjust transparency of skinned window
    o   Skin format reference guide has been updated to v1.7 to document these changes
    o   Improved implementation of rollback to default skin
    o   Full skins cross-compatibility with other overclocking applications based on RivaTuner engine. Special GUI transformation layer allows you to use the skins designed for third party RivaTuner based overclocking applications and makes the process of migration to MSI Afterburner from such overclocking tools much more comfortable for you. You can keep the look and feel of your preferred overclocking application and at the same time enjoy extended MSI Afterburner’s features including full range of supported graphics cards, industry leading powerful and robust monitoring module, flexible video recording features and many more
    •   RivaTuner Statistics Server has been upgraded to v6.2.0
    The added MSI R9 280 series voltage control support might be what many of the users of these cards are waiting for as the majority lacked any overvoltage support so far. After release of 4.0.0 final there will be no more public betas of Afterburner but private testing as said before.

  • MOVED: MSI R7850 2GD5/OC overclocking

    This topic has been moved to Overclocking, Undervolting.
    https://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?topic=165544.0

    Yes, Sapphire Trixx works!
    MSI Afterburner sucks...
    I was buying MSI because I thought it has the best software support, but it does not. On my MSI R7850 does not works voltage control, max core clock could be set only to 1050Mhz...
    With Sapphire Trixx I got to 1200 MHz on core.
    Here are benchmarks in MSI kombustor:
    900/4800 MHz
    1050/5200MHz
    1200/5200MHz

  • MSI GTX 560Ti Hawk Question

    Just a quick question to start with, how many RPMs should my fans be doing at 100%?
    I have a feeling something is going horribly wrong with my new card.

    Use MSI Afterburner to adjust the fan speed - you can draw a graph and dictate how much the fan should be working against a given temp.
    Is the MSI GTX 560 Ti Hawk the most problematic card.....i mean EVERYONE complains about fan noise and temps. If i had read the forums first before buying the card....i wouldn't have bought it.

  • MSI GTX 560Ti Hawk SLI not available

    I have 2 MSI GTX 560Ti Hawk and when I go into Nvidia control panel SLI is not available as an option.
    Both cards are visible and working properly in both the Device manager and the Nvidia control panel and the bridge is installed between the cards.
    I am using Nvidia driver 285.62 which I have completely removed and reinstalled to try and solve the problem.
    The only strange thing I noticed when installing the cards is that there is a small switch next to the SLI bridge that is marked Performance and Silent. When I opened the boxes one card had the switch was set to performance and the other was set to silent. Looking on the net I found that this was how aggressive the fan control was so I set them both to silent. After running into the problem of no SLI I also tried shutting down the machine and moving both switches to Performance but this didn't fix the issue.
    Motherboard is a MSI Z68A-GD65 and Live update 5 says its up to date.
    Any pointer on where to look would be appreciated.

    K  problem sort of solved. I installed an old nvidia driver 270.61 and it works perfectly. Guess I'll just use the old drive until a game is giving me major issues and then see if a new drive is safe.

  • Msi gtx 560ti hawk running always max clocks

    Hello.
    My msi gtx 560ti hawk running always max clocks.
    OC core clock up to 1000MHz gives similar results.
    OC core clock past 1000MHz will stuck it at 1000MHz. Example i set core clock to 1040MHz and run 3DMark11,but
    during the test it never exceeds 1000MHz.
    Card is 15 months old and worked normally so far.
    My OC results before was
    core clock 1000MHz Core Voltage 1.075V
    core clock 1040MHz Core Voltage 1.088V
    core clock 1100MHz Core Voltage 1.100V max temps ~78C
    I never raised core clock over 1100 and memory clock over 2275.
    Things i'm done so far
    used 310.90 310.70 306.97 306.23 301.42 drivers
    disabled antivirus
    mounted card out of the case and switched vbios in silence mode
    used Afterburner 2.2.3 Evga Precision X
    reinstalled windows7
    reverted cpu to stock clocks
    Any advice?
    System
    MB: msi z68-gd65 (B3) bios V22.8
    cpu: i5-2500K
    gpu: msi gtx 560ti hawk
    psu: corsair TX750V2 (62 amp 12 rail)
    ram: G.Skill F3-12800CL9D-8GBXL 2x4g 1600
    os: Windows7 SP1

    No! Nvidia controlpanel was set to max perfomans and windows power options to high perfomance.
     I changed nvidia to adaptive (windows stayed high perf) and now the clocks to come down again.
    Thanks Svet!
    There is still a OC problem when i set core clock over 1000MHz.
    I just ran 3dmark11 at following overclock core     1040MHz
                                                                  shader 2080MHz 
                                                                  memory 2100
                                                                  core voltage 1.075+0.013
    In results window the 3dmark11 says core clock 1040.                                   
    Afterburner 2.3.1 monitoring window says max core clock 1000
                                                                              shader 2000 
                                                                              memory 2099
    Although i´m not seeing shader adjusting bar in 2.3.1, there are  only core clock adjusting bar.
    But adjusting a core clock will adjust shader x2. Am i right?

  • MOVED: MSI N560GTX-TI Twin Frozr II/OC How to overclock

    This topic has been moved to Overclockers & Undervolting & Modding Corner.
    https://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?topic=151272.0

    The card is already OCed.
    OC further can damage your card.
    If you want to proceed start bump GPU core by 20MHz steps.
    You can do this with afterburner: http://downloads.guru3d.com/-MSI-Afterburner-2.2.0-Beta-5-download-2740.html
    Retest stabilty after each one freq. increament.
    You can do test with those programs/tools and real games:
    https://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?topic=148285.msg1102468#msg1102468
    If instability comes, increase GPU vcore by 12.5mV then retest.[you can unlock voltage control from AB settings]
    Do this until make it stable.
    Watch out VGA underload temp while testing.

  • MSI N560GTX-Ti Hawk PerfCap with Dual Monitor setup

    Hi guys,
    as far as I'm concerned, there shouldn't be a PerfCap when running a setup with two monitors on extend desktop setting, am I right? However, my GTX560-Ti does PerfCap and sometimes even does this while gaming (which is incredibly annoying). The only way to get it to clock up again is to reboot my PC.
    My question is, why is that and how can I get rid of this behavior? I already tried updating the VBIOS but it didn't help.
    Thanks in advance
    Monsterkater

    I'm sorry, I thought "PerfCap" would be a known term.
    As the title states, it's a MSI N560GTX-Ti Hawk. The Card is clocking down, GPU-Z reports "PerfCap Reason: Util" which is, according to Google Search, because it isn't challenged enough. However, when running a dual monitor setup it should (again according to Google Search) always run at the default speeds (950/1050/1900 Core/Memory/Shader). I have updated my signature to show my system details as listed in the Posting Guide.
    The temperatures under load are okay, the highest I have seen was 76°C GPU, 74°C Memory and 69°C VRM (all of them measured with MSI Afterburner). I have tried several drivers including Beta drivers and always checked "perform a clean installation". I also tried updating the VBIOS. I didn't know what else to try because Google Search doesn't yield much results for this.

  • MOVED: MSI GE70 Low Frame Rates

    This topic has been moved to MSI Notebooks & Netbooks.
    https://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?topic=174222.0

    The better question is what are your CPU and GPU temperatures? Use CoreTemp and MSI Afterburner to get that information WHILE playing a game.

  • MSI GTX 760 HAWK low overclocking/core voltage lock

    Hello, I bought the gtx 760 hawk and i tried to overclock it, but it's overclocking potential is very low. Furthermore if I change core voltage +12mV in afterburner nothing changes. Voltage is still stuck at 1.200. There's absolutely no difference. I use ver. 3.0.0 beta 14 of afterburner. Please help.

    GTX 760 NVidia specs
    Base Clock 980
    Boost Clock 1033
    MSI N760 Hawk
    Base Clock 1111
    Boost Clock 1176
    That is what the card is guaranteed to prvide you with.
    Additionally, MSI provides voltage and clock adjustments to allow users to potentially OC it even more (no guarantee). Each individual sample will yield different results. We have users that had to RMA cards because they were unstable even at the guaranteed OC'ed speeds.
    Quote
    I see in some reviews that they reach the power limit at the level of 185%
    Review sites receive cherry picked samples that have been pre-tested and the results are indicative of what the best of the range may do. All the manufacturers try and have their best samples reviewed for obvious reasons.
    The MSI Afterburner releases will be updated when Unwinder and the rest of the development team get around to it. Read the dedicated threads in guru3d

Maybe you are looking for

  • Month data display

    Hi all, I have a month column in my report which contain the data like 2007/01, 2007/02,2007/03......I have t use that month column in X-axis of chart & it should display the data like 01,02,03........in report for that I have set formula for month c

  • After updating when i close itunes it wont open back up until i log off and log back on or reboot

    After updating to latest software when i close itunes it wont open back up until i log off and log back on or reboot. Now I have removed itunes and reinstalled it but same problem

  • Access Keys not blocked when popup is open

    Hi, We are using Jdeveloper 11.1.1.4 and we have the requirement to add access keys on specific buttons in our application. When a popup is open the background page is disabled and the user cannot click on buttons outside the popup. If however a butt

  • Sun internal error in java2D

    Can anyone please explain this exception inside awt. This happens when I call an instance of java.awt.Graphics drawLine(...) Since drawLine takes only primitive arguments, there's no possibility of me passing it a null parameter so this must (I presu

  • Acobat quits right after a file is opened

    I just update from 10.3.9 to 10.4.7 - when I open a file in acrobat the app quits. I'm able to open the program, but the minute I open a file the app shuts down with no error message. I did the usual stuff repaired permissions and reinstall the app-