slashragnarok
In the zone
Hi guys,
I thought I would make a thread regarding whether to buy Factory OC'd cards or just buy plain non-oc'd cards and overclock them ourselves(it's pretty simple once we know how to).
My thoughts:
I read somewhere that CPUs and GPUs are rated at much lower frequencies than most of them can actually run at. It's because, that by rating them lower than their potentials, manufacturers can guarantee that each and every one of the chips no matter how, where or when they were fabricated can run at the rated speeds. And that is precisely why overclocking is possible.
If the above assumption is correct then I can assert the following regarding factory OC'd cards:
Say a particular GPU model can run at 900 MHz, guaranteed. The manufacturer rates it lower at 800 MHz and sells it at that spec. Then they rate it at 850 MHz and call it an OC version. Finally they rate it at 900 MHz and call it a Power OC version or something along those lines. Because we must remember that no matter what the rating of the GPU is, the rating printed on the box is guaranteed.
So does that mean we are not prudent in buying OC versions? If the card is the same it will have the same overclocking headroom. Of course every chip is different and the OC potential will vary. So should we just buy normal versions and OC them ourselves?
Or is it that the chips are pre-categorized as per quality and then they are put on shelves as the different versions?
Please share your thoughts and comments to shed light on this matter for my benefit and for everyone else's whois are as confused as me.
I thought I would make a thread regarding whether to buy Factory OC'd cards or just buy plain non-oc'd cards and overclock them ourselves(it's pretty simple once we know how to).
My thoughts:
I read somewhere that CPUs and GPUs are rated at much lower frequencies than most of them can actually run at. It's because, that by rating them lower than their potentials, manufacturers can guarantee that each and every one of the chips no matter how, where or when they were fabricated can run at the rated speeds. And that is precisely why overclocking is possible.
If the above assumption is correct then I can assert the following regarding factory OC'd cards:
Say a particular GPU model can run at 900 MHz, guaranteed. The manufacturer rates it lower at 800 MHz and sells it at that spec. Then they rate it at 850 MHz and call it an OC version. Finally they rate it at 900 MHz and call it a Power OC version or something along those lines. Because we must remember that no matter what the rating of the GPU is, the rating printed on the box is guaranteed.
So does that mean we are not prudent in buying OC versions? If the card is the same it will have the same overclocking headroom. Of course every chip is different and the OC potential will vary. So should we just buy normal versions and OC them ourselves?
Or is it that the chips are pre-categorized as per quality and then they are put on shelves as the different versions?
Please share your thoughts and comments to shed light on this matter for my benefit and for everyone else's who
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