@@IAMDEMIURGE Dropping the voltage supplied to the GPU thru the PCI-E slot, while typically keeping the same core/memory frequencies. It's usually done to reduce the temperatures, since less voltage means less heat going thru the chip.
Im watching the video i havn't tested it though if what DannyzReveiws says is true, you can just change the voltage and power limits below 100%? then run the auto tune? that would be a undervolt?
This is literally the same feature applications like Afterburner have had for years which just uses Nvidia's API. Software 'overclocking' hasn't been dangerous for about a decade because of the hard restrictions Nvidia puts in place and hasn't been anymore dangerous to your warranty than enabling XMP. The only potential issue is maxing out power limits but this is rarely a problem outside of extremely power hungry cards with bad cooling designs that would have likely had a problem either way. I'll give Nvidia credit for finally removing the G.E. login requirement but don't get tricked into thinking you need it to do any of this.
Did the automatic tuning on the nvidia app and the OC scanner on MSI Afterburner and got exactly the same result on a 3060 Ti. I'll stick to afterburner for now ;)
It's confusing since AMD has had this feature for quite a few years. It makes more sense than overclocking too. I've tested it on a 6800 and it ended up raising performance and made the card quieter.
There should be an option where user defines the maximum voltage and then the app scans what is the maximum possible clocks for that voltage. Yeah I understand that company always wants to provide 100% stability but since overclocking or undervolting is fiddling around anyway then I don't think that anybody would get mad if like 1 out of 50 games may crash and needs a bit more voltage. But it would save a lot of time for people who don't want to spend wholde day or don't have the knowledge to manually fine tune their card.
@@arenzricodexd4409 But do we have something like that? At the moment theres software like Rivatuner that are oriented for OC - yeah sure you can also undervolt with it and set the clocks but since all the cards (even the same models) are still different getting the ideal balance for voltage, clocks and temps take quite a lot time and messing around.
Im watching the video i havn't tested it though if what DannyzReveiws says is true, you can just change the voltage and power limits below 100%? then run the auto tune? that would be a undervolt?
This IS essentially what the tool is doing though... it changes the voltage and tests it at different frequencies. It will constantly CRASH but you won't actually see that. The software figures out EXACTLY where you are crashing, then backs off until it's stable. Getting the absolute "MAXIMUM" as I think you're trying to describe it really doesn't make sense. We're talking maybe 2% at most likely. And of course, the internal hardware will downclock if the TEMPERATURE is too high, which it will tend to be if you're increasing the VOLTAGE. *This isn't 10+ years ago. The ADDITIONAL gains you can get over a modern, stable overclock are insignificant. NVidia isn't going to offer a "may be unstable" mode to overclockers who want another 2% at most.
@@Jumoana Can you confirm this? I always thought that using that "autotuner" ignores the set voltages and just does the test to see whats the maximum possible before thermal throttling. I have a 3090 and would love to have option to set the voltage to like 850mW and then let the software figure out what the maximum clockspeed would be with that voltage. Manually you just have to guestimate, set the frequency for desired voltage, then test it to see if it crashes or not, try go even higher etc. Since you have a clockspeed and also boost clocks its pretty tedious to fine tune it.
You get better result on afterburner with the app i was just able to get a 145mhz on clock speed and for the memory 200mhz and whitout it i was able to get stable 200 mhz and 1200mhz on the memory
Intel has this very same feature built in to their Intel Arc Control software for their Alchemist graphics cards. I would still use afterburner though for nvidia though.
Im watching the video i havn't tested it though if what DannyzReveiws says is true, you can just change the voltage and power limits below 100%? then run the auto tune? that would be a undervolt?
After testing the NVIDIA APP overclocking, I stay with my manual overclock in MSI Afterburner, because my tweaked profile have a lot less voltage than stock even with the overclock I done, around 0.956 mV for 1980 MHz, GTX 1660 Ti
Maybe the 1 click OV is not there because doing that manually when OCing is what breaks the warranty. But, I dont know, I am just guessing. I dont bother to OC my 4090. I got the ROG STRIX OC. it's already sweet. I may try it one day running a bench with 3Dmark, but I dont need to in any other situation. I'm really looking forward to the new software, tho.
Image Nvidia would auto OC your 4090 to give you Ti performance. Unthinkable😅 Anyway nice test. I did my own OC undervolt if my 6650xt to bring down temps power and noise. Its nice to see AMD features advantage was ended. Now AMD has to bring comparable up scaling..
Im watching the video i havn't tested it though if what DannyzReveiws says is true, you can just change the voltage and power limits below 100%? then run the auto tune? that would be a undervolt?
Probably better kept to third party software like AB. if you do all the thing yourself then third party solution have no reason to exist anymore. Look what the complain are when nvidia coming out with their founders edition card. Some partner accused them to compete with AIB. and software like AB already free in the first place.
This is super buggy for me no matter what i try always says it was interrupted and secondly it doesnt push the memory to even do anything at all having the tiny amount it adds compared to +1000 which any 4090 can do fine for example is so pointless to me still yet too test how much it will push my core as it doesnt work, still going bet that its no where near manual results yet.
Lol with this roookie shit, you don't EVER say that you overclocked when RMA-ing No companies will be testing your GPU for overclocking. They don't have people, resources, and most of the time tech to test it with on that level Don't bother. I look at overclocking as something mild to have on the set up, but mainly undervolting the CPU/GPU, that's where the good stuff is.