Results -9 to 0 of 527

Threaded View

  1. #11
    Player
    Squa11_Leonhart's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Gridania
    Posts
    1,123
    Character
    Kaya Yuuna
    World
    Cerberus
    Main Class
    Archer Lv 70
    Quote Originally Posted by Kittra View Post
    Um, it really depends on the GPU to tell the truth.

    If you have a 600 or 700 series card now, 84C is EXTREMELY bad, as the card will begin throttling it's speed down at 60.1C for a 600 series card, and 70.1C for a 700 series card.
    False: between 60 and 70 degree's gets you the highest possible boost clock on 600 series cards, when the card hits 70 it downsteps the boost clock 13mhz, and does so again at 80c.

    Stepping back is not the same as throttling, anything over the base clock is a boost clock so stepping back the multiplier when you hit 70 is not throttling.
    also 700 series is designed to operate at the 80c mark(GPU Boost 2.0), with the clockrate adjusting up and down around this temperature.

    If the temperature remains above 60 or 70C for long enough, the card will continue to drop it's speed until it reaches a set level (I believe at a certain point you will get speeds low enough that it doesn't feel like you spent $400 on a new GPU...).
    False, the clockrates are set and defined in a stepped table in the vBios and temperature only affects the current boost clock and fan speed.

    Optimal temperatures for any GPU range between 50-60C. Anything higher is considered by the manufacturer to be beyond optimal operating conditions.
    You can still do it, but with newer Nvidia cards you can expect to be penalized for it.
    Rubbish and nonsense
    Further your 84c comment = dangerzone is fundamentally without basis, high end video cards have operated in the 70-84c range for years, even since the Geforce FX era, Keeping temps out of this range was fundamental for overclockers only, as higher temperatures reduced overclock headroom and instigated transistor leakage which necessitated higher voltages to keep the core stable, which in effect just increased the temperature further.

    Reference design coolers typically target 85-90c, taking into account temperature and climate differences.

    Quote Originally Posted by DevaraJasper View Post
    you guys...
    wanna know why this is (i think) a client side error?
    ive been running the game in a very (and i mean very) low set up.
    my comp is not even i series, its core 2 duo
    ddr 3 2gb
    geforce gt 240 (i dont think i need to put other parts of this junk)
    now youre probably thinking that im joking but its the truth, ive been playing for a month (and several days) and it was ok, there was not a single BSOD, or BlackSOD, the game load very long and very unresponsive but i can still play without crashes. after the 9/6 patch i crashed inside garuda, and then it never happen again for a several days and then it happens again in a dungeon, and then again, and then it happens every 10 mins. ive been looking around to find a solution, but then i found out that people with higher setup also experience the same thing. of course i need to buy new gears (already ordered it) but i dont think i wanna play again if the results are just the same...
    Sorry, but no.

    A change of processor load in a user mode program will not crash a system that is already operating in a stable state.
    (0)
    Last edited by Squa11_Leonhart; 10-21-2013 at 06:04 PM.