How much you can OC depends on the model of the core.
I have used 2 different apps and currently I use NVIDIA Inspector.
I can run 975Mhz all day long and can run higher but I'm keeping the heat down right now so on hot days I drop down to 900.
How much you can OC depends on the model of the core.
I have used 2 different apps and currently I use NVIDIA Inspector.
I can run 975Mhz all day long and can run higher but I'm keeping the heat down right now so on hot days I drop down to 900.
Yes it makes a difference, I think the SE is a cut down version.
On NVIDIA Inspector what is the gpu listed as:
GPU - GFxxx
Shaders - how many
Default clock - xxx Mhz
EDIT:
Anyway get OCCT to test stability - http://www.ocbase.com/
Bump the shader up in 20 Mhz steps at a time, run OCCT while watching your GPU temp.
When you hit the frequency where it is unstable bump the voltage up 1 step provided your temp is OK.
Run the frequency up till you become unstable again and if your temp is OK try another bump in the voltage.
Once you see a spike in temp with no decent gain gain in frequency back the voltage down one step and stay about 40 MHZ lower on the shader from the unstable frequency.