
Palit GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Gaming Pro OC
11 GB
Palit GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Gaming Pro OC
11 GB
Hello I noticed with the Palit, when I play a game that is large (in my case WoW) then the graphics card vibrates or it hums, is that normal? and the chip clock jumps to about 1950 Mhz although the boost frequency is at 1650 Mhz, is that normal? I don't have much experience yet and I'm a bit worried. Thanks for the feedback.
Hi! I was able to extensively test the exact same card yesterday and started a few overclocking attempts.
The boost clock is really such a thing with the 2080ti. ALL 2080 ti's end up boosting between 1905-1950, depending on the length of the game.... After a longer session, your boost rate would probably settle at around 1905 as well, depending on the intensity of the game.
I overclocked the card with the ThunderMaster so that I get a constant 2070-2085mhz in the games (under warranty!).
I couldn't find any vibrations, did you tighten the card with both screws?
Download the ThunderMaster, it's the official tool from Palit. Then you can see at what fan speed (in %) you can hear the noises. With this card, they are really very quiet and only somewhat perceptible from about 80%! (Of course, it also depends on how loud it is in the case otherwise!
Hi!
No problem!
Hm, it's difficult to tell about the "buzzing"... Well, with the reference cards, many have already spoken of a "coil whine", do you possibly mean something like that? So you hear it when the Mhz of the card jump up?
So you have two possibilities!
1. click on "Overclocker" in Palit Thundermaster and then click on "OC Scan". This is the new autoscan programme from nVidia, which automatically overclocks your card. This usually takes about 15 minutes. The system keeps giving a few more Mhz to the card and at the same time the voltage is continuously increased to guarantee stable operation!
2. also using Palit Thundermaster, but "old school", by doing it yourself. Don't worry, you can't break anything anyway. The card will automatically clock down if you have given it too much power and it can no longer handle the clock safely.
Here's a little tip on how you can get started.
First, set the performance limit all the way to the right (126%), set the frame rate to MAX FPS. Then you can start a test run by entering + 100Mhz for the chip clock and e.g. + 500Mhz for the memory clock. Normally, you then increase these values slightly until you notice that the card can no longer keep up with the clock (either a programme crashes or artefacts form in the programme!).
For me, the limit is around + 185 / 190 Mhz for the chip clock and + 1000Mhz for the memory clock.
There are certain games that react a bit more sensitively to overclocking and can be a bitch. For this purpose, you can set your overclocked settings to 1 and an "overclocking-free mode" to 2 in the 5 possible presets (in the Palit Thundermaster), for example, so that you can quickly switch on-the-fly.
About the temperature: I think if you have peak temps of maximum 85 degrees, then you are definitely safe! Sure, nVidia gives out higher maximum temperatures, but I think a few degrees less definitely won't hurt. The rest is just benchmarks anyway! :-)
Your said 70 degrees are at the maximum clock? That would be a very good value, similar to mine!
The advantage with Palit: If you carry out these overclocking attempts in the Thundermaster, you are completely covered by the warranty, another good info for this:
https://www.computerbase.de/2016-09...