hm, that's strange. but i will try it out. at first i didn't want to run the card at max. i wanted to check if undervolting is possible.
so vbe7 is only running at max settings?
greetz and thx
No, what it does is it allows you to set
higher (or lower) voltage and clock settings than your original BIOS for your 3d settings as
new defaults, so that when you game you have those settings as default and you don't need to use AB or Trixx or even CCC. When you stop gaming and you go back to 2d, the voltage and clocks drop as always to your 2d defaults.
For the 2d settings, here is what the creator of this tool says in his first post:
There are some limitations though...
- You cant change 2D / UVD voltages
- You cant set 2D / UVD clocks higher than the values stored in BIOS (these limitations are intentional, without these limits powerplay would go nuts...)
So I think you didn't make yourself clear in your first post.
a) If you want to
undervolt your 2d settings, you can't do that with this tool.
b) If like most people here you want
the highest stable overclock possible as default when gaming so that you don't have to use AB or Trixx or CCC or whatever, you can use this tool - which for that purpose also allows you to raise 3d voltage further than any original BIOS. It also allows you to raise TDP which you will need with higher voltages than the original BIOS ones. I thought that's what you wanted to do.
So the idea is that for significantly higher clocks than original BIOS you need higher voltage than original BIOS and also higher TDP than original BIOS. That's what this tool can do. Most people here set the highest voltage they can live with as the new default at their modified BIOS, also raise the TDP and then find the highest clocks stable with that. For example my settings @ 1.256V with a TDP (W) of 250 are 1175 core and 1525 memory for my Sapphire 7970s. These are the settings I made my new defaults with my final modified BIOS. (I didn't touch my 2d settings, I left them as they were). That's what my previous post was all about. Sorry If I misunderstood you.
c) If instead you want to
undervolt your 3d settings, you can do that - but why publish your highest Afterburner voltage and vcore settings and complain that you can't get further than 850 vcore with this tool? That's what confused me. And how would in that case "changing the power control to +20" help you? You want lower power consumption, right?
So the idea in this scenario would be to choose the lower 3d voltage you want and see what the highest stable clocks would be with that lower than original BIOS voltage. Your clocks will probably be lower to a lot lower than what you had originally, depending on how much you undervolt. Since you are undervolting, you don't need to change TDP in that scenario.
Hope this helps.