Performance - Overclocking
OverclockingOf course with most videocards we can do some easy tricks to boost the overall performance a little. It's called overclocking the videocard and by increasing the frequency of the videocards memory and gpu we can make the videocard increase it's calculation clock cycles per second. It sounds hard but it really can be done in less then a few minutes. I always tend to recommend to novice users and beginners not to increase that frequency any higher then 5-10% of the core and memory clock. Example: if your card would run at 100 MHz then I suggest you don't increase that frequency any higher than 110 MHz.
More advanced users push that frequency often way higher. Usually when memory starts to show white dots 'snow' you should go down 10 MHz and leave it at that. The core can be somewhat different. Usually when you are clocking to hard it'll start to show artifacts, empty polygons or it will even freeze. I recommend that you back down at least 10-15 MHz from the moment you notice an artifact. Look carefully and observe well.
All in all .. do it at your own risk. Overclocking your card too fast or constantly to it's limit might damage your card and it's not covered by your warranty.
You will benefit from overclocking the most with product that is limited or you may called it 'tuned down'. Now then, we know that this graphics core is likely more powerful then what we have seen in the previous benchmarks. Therefore by increasing the memory and core frequency we should be able to witness some higher performance results.
Will the cooling solution help cooling down the graphics card enough for a nice overclock ?
Right, let's get started. Default clock speed for the core is 380 MHz. Default memory frequency is clocked at 680 (2x340) MHz on a 256 bit wide memory bus. Now with the help of the latest version of RivaTuner we where able to overclock the graphics card (low-level) towards 400 MHz on the core and 740 MHz (2x370) on the memory. So the fasting thing available is getting even faster now. If we went towards ~760/780 on the memory we would get snow. If we pumped the graphics core speed up about 15 Mhz we would see small artifacts. So the results you see here are 100% stable without any imageĀ corruption.
Have a look at the performance gain:
Quake III Arena | 800x600 | 1024x768 | 1280x1024 | 1600x1200 |
Radeon 9800 Pro | 257 | 248 | 231 | 193 |
400/370 | 260 | 251 | 237 | 203 |
AquaMark | 800x600 | 1024x768 | 1280x1024 | 1600x1200 |
Radeon 9800 Pro | 89 | 85 | 73 | 56 |
400/370 | 90 | 85 | 76 | 59 |
Okay agreed. Overclocking such high-performance cards will show you little gain in extra performance. Still fun though ;)