1:32 you can flat the curve by holding shift down into the black area behind your undervolting point and drag them all down underneath ur undervolting point. They will automatically adjust to your highest point then. So you dont have to do it all manual. 3:51 So no its not time consuming :P
I just bought a 2070 Super Strix and did the following: 1. Get a baseline benchmark score/s at stock. 2. Reduce the power limit to, say, 80%, and use Afterburner's OC Scanner (use v4.6.2, no later) to find an overclock at that limit. Test again. 3. If the performance is within your desired margin of stock (I chose 2%), reduce to 75% power limit, repeat, check, and keep going until you fall out of your margin. I got down to 65% power @ 98.5% performance... this cut the watts from 255 to 165. With no perceptible loss of frames.
Some people doing undervolting DONT set the +130 (here example) core offset and instead jump into curve editor and just choose their ideal max mhz and voltage ie. 2040 at 1.25v so everything before that is stock and +0 on the graph, but at that point on its like +105 to start. What is better? I can do that, and go for 2040mhz at 1.18v and it finishes time spy and fire strike, but when temps start to throttle it can downclock down to 1890 but usually 1935 at the least ie. Stock Max. If I add 110 offset and THEN apply the undervolt 2040 - 1.037, with custom changes prior ie 1.012 to 1.031 is set to 2025.. this works too, like in the vid. The only difference is higher voltage/temp i guess but benefit is when it downclocks it only really goes to 1980 lowest
You should try dropping to 1900mhz to see if you can get to 900mV and then see what savings you make then... 35 on the clock is probably not even 1 FPS trade-off in reality.
@@syzerix3157 He's just UNDERCLOCKING (or lowering the overclock) by moving the squares down at each point. Look at what the X+Y on the chart represent.. 😅
Bro thanks so much my GPU was going at 69(nice) degrees at full load, I undervolted it and now its 61 degrees underload its quieter and I have gained around 5 fps wtf thanks for the tip.
Thank you for this informative video. I recently purchased a laptop that has a 10th gen i7 and a 2070 super. Looking forward to undervolting both in pursuit of lower temps and better battery life. Rock on!
I did so great on my RTX2070. Before undervolt Heaven Score = 4509 Temps 85+ After Heaven Score = 5107 Temps 75+ this worked so great I recommend anyone.
Can someone please tell me if I'm missing something? All you're doing here is ensuring the GPU never goes above 1990MhZ, even with voltages over 925mV? What's being performed at 1:30 appears to just be UNDERCLOCKING, and not UNDERVOLTING. Any improvements to clock speeds were made when the curve automatically changed when the 130MhZ OC was applied. From there speeds were just being downgraded slightly?
he is locking the frequency at that 1990Mhz @ a much lower voltage (943mv would hold handle about 1860Mhz in stock config). You can only cgo so far, If you keep bumping up the frequency at that voltage, it will become unstabel and crash. It is trial and error, your gpu might achieve a little higher or lower frequency by that given voltage and that is way the manufacturers leave this margin we are trying to get rid off as much as we can to save energy while balancing with the lower temps, enables the chip to keep the clock constant, not having to drop tens of Hz everytime the temps rise a few degrees. In some cases, you wont be able to achieve a higher overal clock but being more stable might give you a higher average fps
There is a fundamental problem with your testing here. AVG TDP might not tell nothing if you reset it at the wrong times. What you need is to run a benchmark and reset it right at the start and repeat the process for your overclocking profile
Doing this just sets a clock curve and results in lower benchmark scores that a 130+ OC on a stock curve though? I want to see the same 4060 kombustor score but with lower volatages
Started with 937 mV 1935 Mhz +1000mhz on vram. But appeared some of microstuttering on the witcher 3. Now I thing its all stable with 950mV at 1920 mhz and +600 mhz vram. Thats perfect to get some extra frames and -4ºC on Founders edition, wich is too hot from stock in my opinion. My curve its more agressive (steep) when it gets max speed core. not sure if this could be related to microstuttering. Thanks for the video!
I have everything set up like yours, initially everything worked on frequency 2000 and voltage 925, for some time I had to change the voltage to 950, and today even to 950 voltage, for example in forza 4, the image freezes, the sounds of the game can be heard normally, while the image or freezes or turns black. What's happening? This has never happened before.
@@Superior85 oh dang it, I cannot even find anyone overclocking the 2070 super amp, I only see most of them using the extreme edition, if only u can help me cus when I play some demanding games like borderland, at some area my some fps just dropped to 50 fps
sure, though each chip overclocks a bit differently. it took a bit of trial and error (ie. crashing in games) for me to get the result in the video for my specific card using the latest version of MSI Afterburner 4.6.2.
This is WRONG!!! DON'T DO IT LIKE THIS! The only thing you are doing is limiting the amount of MHZ the card can reach. If you really wanted to undervolt, you'd have to RISE the squares on the left side, not lower the ones on the right side! Please delete this video and make a new one!!!
@@danhough242 he is correct. undervolting is reducing the voltage that is used when boosting the card. you raise the squares on the right to match your cards max voltage and keep raising more and more until you notice artefacts or crashes. then lower a few back down and go from there. this video is horrible and he has no idea what he is talking about.
Чувак, спасибо тебе огромное. Только сегодня открыл для себя эту фишку. Это же просто как 2 пальца обоссать, а сколько пользы! Просто пиздец. Спасибо бро!!!
1:32 you can flat the curve by holding shift down into the black area behind your undervolting point and drag them all down underneath ur undervolting point. They will automatically adjust to your highest point then. So you dont have to do it all manual.
3:51 So no its not time consuming :P
thanks for the tip
All the time I lost doing it point by point...
@@maqui1814 lmao :P
Bruh
I just bought a 2070 Super Strix and did the following:
1. Get a baseline benchmark score/s at stock.
2. Reduce the power limit to, say, 80%, and use Afterburner's OC Scanner (use v4.6.2, no later) to find an overclock at that limit. Test again.
3. If the performance is within your desired margin of stock (I chose 2%), reduce to 75% power limit, repeat, check, and keep going until you fall out of your margin.
I got down to 65% power @ 98.5% performance... this cut the watts from 255 to 165. With no perceptible loss of frames.
I use 1890Mhz & 0.9v for my 2070 Super but it dropped my temperatures and power usage significantly without affecting performance.
should also note that undervolting can make coil whine much quieter.
thats why im doing it lmao
@@234wdsd8 did you manage to do it? I dont get it
@@234wdsd8 did u succeed?
@@bluelemongamez971 nah i did everything right and nothing
Some people doing undervolting DONT set the +130 (here example) core offset and instead jump into curve editor and just choose their ideal max mhz and voltage ie. 2040 at 1.25v so everything before that is stock and +0 on the graph, but at that point on its like +105 to start.
What is better?
I can do that, and go for 2040mhz at 1.18v and it finishes time spy and fire strike, but when temps start to throttle it can downclock down to 1890 but usually 1935 at the least ie. Stock Max.
If I add 110 offset and THEN apply the undervolt 2040 - 1.037, with custom changes prior ie 1.012 to 1.031 is set to 2025.. this works too, like in the vid. The only difference is higher voltage/temp i guess but benefit is when it downclocks it only really goes to 1980 lowest
I just have the RTX 2070 so I didn't use +130 Core Clock but +110. It seems to work so far. MY GPU isn't getting loud anymore when I play. :D
An already efficient GPU is made even more efficient by simultaneously lowering the voltage while over clocking.
Please look at my comment!
You are misleading people and yourself!
You should try dropping to 1900mhz to see if you can get to 900mV and then see what savings you make then... 35 on the clock is probably not even 1 FPS trade-off in reality.
@@maxzett No, he's not. How's he doing that?
@@syzerix3157 he's not undervolting
@@syzerix3157 He's just UNDERCLOCKING (or lowering the overclock) by moving the squares down at each point. Look at what the X+Y on the chart represent.. 😅
Bro thanks so much my GPU was going at 69(nice) degrees at full load, I undervolted it and now its 61 degrees underload its quieter and I have gained around 5 fps wtf thanks for the tip.
Thank you for this informative video. I recently purchased a laptop that has a 10th gen i7 and a 2070 super. Looking forward to undervolting both in pursuit of lower temps and better battery life. Rock on!
I did so great on my RTX2070.
Before undervolt
Heaven Score = 4509
Temps 85+
After
Heaven Score = 5107
Temps 75+
this worked so great I recommend anyone.
can you tell your settings i ave an rtx 2070 super gigabyte
Can someone please tell me if I'm missing something? All you're doing here is ensuring the GPU never goes above 1990MhZ, even with voltages over 925mV? What's being performed at 1:30 appears to just be UNDERCLOCKING, and not UNDERVOLTING.
Any improvements to clock speeds were made when the curve automatically changed when the 130MhZ OC was applied. From there speeds were just being downgraded slightly?
he is locking the frequency at that 1990Mhz @ a much lower voltage (943mv would hold handle about 1860Mhz in stock config). You can only cgo so far, If you keep bumping up the frequency at that voltage, it will become unstabel and crash. It is trial and error, your gpu might achieve a little higher or lower frequency by that given voltage and that is way the manufacturers leave this margin we are trying to get rid off as much as we can to save energy while balancing with the lower temps, enables the chip to keep the clock constant, not having to drop tens of Hz everytime the temps rise a few degrees. In some cases, you wont be able to achieve a higher overal clock but being more stable might give you a higher average fps
There is a fundamental problem with your testing here. AVG TDP might not tell nothing if you reset it at the wrong times. What you need is to run a benchmark and reset it right at the start and repeat the process for your overclocking profile
My card profile: stock 235w, 1.05v 2010mzh 77c gpu, undervolt 135w, 0.800v 1815mzh 60c
у меня 65С 1935mhz 0,975v. А было 77С
Doing this just sets a clock curve and results in lower benchmark scores that a 130+ OC on a stock curve though? I want to see the same 4060 kombustor score but with lower volatages
I still prefer my 2+ GHz under any conditions, PT up to ~292 W and temps. max around 70 C around 250+ W with proper big fans at low noise and speed.
Started with 937 mV 1935 Mhz +1000mhz on vram. But appeared some of microstuttering on the witcher 3. Now I thing its all stable with 950mV at 1920 mhz and +600 mhz vram. Thats perfect to get some extra frames and -4ºC on Founders edition, wich is too hot from stock in my opinion. My curve its more agressive (steep) when it gets max speed core. not sure if this could be related to microstuttering. Thanks for the video!
you're welcome, glad this worked for you.
I have everything set up like yours, initially everything worked on frequency 2000 and voltage 925, for some time I had to change the voltage to 950, and today even to 950 voltage, for example in forza 4, the image freezes, the sounds of the game can be heard normally, while the image or freezes or turns black. What's happening? This has never happened before.
Was it stable for you in Forza 4 previously?
Is your CPU and/or RAM overclocked as well?
you know you have to higher the curve? more MHz for the same Voltage and not less MHz for the same Voltage.....omg.....Jesus!
Super! Thank you, bro!
My rtx 2070s 1890mhz 0.82v RAM is +1100 mhz, my card use 135w max
nice
:O
Yeeah,but u stable in 99 of 100 pictures. U got powerdrops for sure
@@nvidiazimbabwe5914 Nope, Frame Times and FPS is stable
My new card is the rtx 2080 ti
Uv 1830MHz 0.8v
sir, is your gpu the zotac 2070 super amp or if it is not then which gpu is it u are using in this video?
no, this was with the founders edition 2070 super
@@Superior85 oh dang it, I cannot even find anyone overclocking the 2070 super amp, I only see most of them using the extreme edition, if only u can help me cus when I play some demanding games like borderland, at some area my some fps just dropped to 50 fps
@@ahuman8711 its the same card bro, same process
Can I use this profile for zotac rtx 2070 super amp extreme?
sure, though each chip overclocks a bit differently. it took a bit of trial and error (ie. crashing in games) for me to get the result in the video for my specific card using the latest version of MSI Afterburner 4.6.2.
have the similar one as u except no extreme
I have the same GPU as well and you can get the curve while simple performing OC scan or just try it manually
this video card is rtx 2070 super gaming oc or windforce
Nvidia "Founders Edition"
Great. thank you for it
you're welcome.
is it a troll video ?
Thank you very much very good information
What kind of videocard is this?
2070 Super Founders Edition
@@Superior85 6+8 pin ?
@@АлексейТрапезников-и9ч yes
@@Superior85 I have a RTX 2070 Palit super JetStream managed to find a lower voltage 968 Mv, the power is 8+8pin
background music is not helping with your weak voice...
THE CURVE IS NOT SHOWING UP! HEEELP
Woohoo! My RTX 2070 Super is now running at about 68c when before it was pushing 80c!!
2100Mhz / 61c /
@@borisbardal7359 BS
Where you playing with a Steam controller here? lol.
This is WRONG!!!
DON'T DO IT LIKE THIS!
The only thing you are doing is limiting the amount of MHZ the card can reach.
If you really wanted to undervolt, you'd have to RISE the squares on the left side, not lower the ones on the right side!
Please delete this video and make a new one!!!
That doesnt sound right
@@danhough242 he is correct. undervolting is reducing the voltage that is used when boosting the card. you raise the squares on the right to match your cards max voltage and keep raising more and more until you notice artefacts or crashes. then lower a few back down and go from there. this video is horrible and he has no idea what he is talking about.
nice.. i fan undervolting CPU an GPU
Спасибо! на - 8
Schmutz Video Bro
Чувак, спасибо тебе огромное. Только сегодня открыл для себя эту фишку. Это же просто как 2 пальца обоссать, а сколько пользы! Просто пиздец. Спасибо бро!!!