![]() +400 (800 effective) on the memory was the max I could do stable.Ĭonclusion - Manual OC is less effective than what the scanner tool does for you. Boost starts at 2101mhz then falls back to 2088mhz. +120 on the core was the highest it would go stable. Results so far with OC Scanner manual boost curve:įan at stock profile - 74c max temp - 2114mhz stableįan at 100% - 54c max temp - 2139mhz stable Oh, I forgot to mention that it topped out at 74c during load on stock fan profile. ![]() I will report back my findings of my additional testing in a bit! I more than likely hit one of the dud cards, as it was only able to hit 2025 stable before reducing itself to 1999mhz after a while. I'm about to fiddle with the memory some to see if it can handle anything else being thrown at it.Ĭompared to my experience with the Strix, this is leaps and bounds better so far. I am unfamiliar with the OC Scanner, and if it affects anything other than the clock speed based on the voltage. I'm going to put it through some more rigorous testing now for longer periods to see how long it remains stable at these clocks. It has completed the benches each time since then. I tested it with 3dMark and Heaven extreme preset many times now, and only had it crash once. ![]() ![]() I was able to hit 2168mhz at times, but it settled over time to 2114mhz stable. I ran the OC Scanner tool within the new Precision XOC. I just got it about an hour ago, and have been benching it. I caught an FTW on Newegg yesterday, and overnighted it. They did not have any to replace it with, so they refunded me. I contacted ASUS, and they recommended that I RMA it with Newegg. It was unable to run on the stock OC profile without crashing. So, I started out with the ASUS Strix 1080 OC.
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