Ooof, that's hot. Well, all gpus are worth undervolting so I would bring those temps down anyway. I'm slightly disappointed though, it's not especially power hungry gpu and yet they still managed to stick on it a very small cooler.
2:15 any recommendation for undervolting settings for Palit 4070 Super? I'm trying to lower gpu hotspot and gpu temp but not sacrificing much on performance. I followed other user's guide which sits currently 0.900V @ 2550 Mhz Core and +1000Mhz Memory Clock. I'd like to know if anyone has made it more efficient?
Hi there and thanks for watching. When considering a GPU upgrade, it's not just about the GPU's power consumption, but also your entire system's needs. Use a PSU calculator to determine if your current power supply can handle it. Remember, your PSU's wattage should exceed your system's estimated consumption for stability. Check out the link below for a PSU calculator: www.fsplifestyle.com/landing/calculator.html
Should i get other brand instead of Palit? And another question should i instead get a RX 7800 XT? I think i will be using the GPU for 3D Rendering (Game Development)...
@@manongunboxing agreed, i think my plan is to buy a used 3070, then wait for the 50 series, that being said i have to upgrade the motherboard too since it wont support pcie 5 in the am5 platform.
I got myself sapphire nitro 7800xt a couple of monthes ago for my mATX build (jonsbo d31), but really think to sell it and go with 4070 (non-S) - gigabyte windforce 2x as its only 201mm long, so i can build smthn like AKLLA A3 CNC (once they restock) :)
mostly due to size, sapphire nitro is 325mm long/62mm thick, not every itx case can support that; as of late i was considering meshroom d (with something like 4070 proart and 2x slim fans on intake - 300mm/50mm) and shiny snake s400@@vondsoriano7082 i like meshroom d a bit more, as it doesnt require riser and support better cooling (both cpu cooler and fans), but its also significantly larger edt. if size is not an a problem for you - 7800xt nitro+ is an amazing gpu, very cool and quiet (i have like 61*C GPU temp, 82*C hotspot and 92*C vram temp under OCCT vram + furmark loads) :)
Here you go: GPU temp: Average: 70.46 Max: 74.4 GPU Hot spot temp: Average: 83 Max: 89 My obvious insight: Average temp performance for the price of loud fan.
@@joj4096 Precisely it’s not the cheapest GPU, but the cheapest card model with that GPU. I would paid a little extra for model with better cooling, but that’s just me.
@@FriendlyPCGamers nobody play aaa games in laptop more than 30min , especially mid/low end laptop, their clock isnt even that high, and not to mention that most people use crappy PSU, expensive PSU doesnt mean good PSU, you dont even know what you talkin about!! Any survived GPU beyond that period is most likely from someone who doesnt play game long session duration regularly
@@AhmadFauzi-pd2tb "nobody plays aaa games in laptop more than 30mins especially mid/low end laptop".. lol I played for hours daily on my GTX 1650 Laptop for 3 years and the GPU reaches 90c tons of times but the performance didn't dip after 3 years. all you need is to clean and maintain it. GPUs can run safely up to 95c.