- Joined
- Jan 26, 2020
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- 416 (0.23/day)
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- Minbar
System Name | Da Bisst |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 5800X |
Motherboard | GigabyteB550 AORUS PRO |
Cooling | 2x280mm + 1x120 radiators, 4xArctic P14 PWM, 2xNoctua P12, TechN CPU, Alphacool Eisblock Auror GPU |
Memory | Corsair Vengeance RGB 32 GB DDR4 3800 MHz C16 tuned |
Video Card(s) | AMD PowerColor 6800XT |
Storage | Samsung 970 Evo Plus 512GB |
Display(s) | BenQ EX3501R |
Case | SilentiumPC Signum SG7V EVO TG ARGB |
Audio Device(s) | Onboard |
Power Supply | ChiefTec Proton Series 1000W (BDF-1000C) |
Mouse | Mionix Castor |
Also have the reference form Power color, and mine is also a vey good overclocker, even with the stock cooler, can do 2.6 on stock air, and will see how much more it can on water. Temps become an issue after 2.6, hence the coming water loop.New poster, and proud owner of a new 6800XT! Just up picked a Power Color Reference model last week. Had to pay £100 over the MSRP to secure it but well worth it in the end once I got it home, put it under water and started running some benchmarks.
I bought myself an EK Quantum-Vector Water Block and installed it a few days ago as well, and put it on a custom loop with a couple of EK 360mm Radiators (1 x PE and 1 x XE) to cool both the CPU and GPU.
On idle, I'm around 30 degrees and on full load during a Port Royale/Time Spy stress test, I'm around 54-55 degrees with a Junction Temp. of around 70 after an hour of looping. During gaming, I'm usually around 50/66-67 respectively.
During a TimeSpy bench, I was hitting a graphics score of 20329 just by tinkering with the Radeon software and under volting. Setting my core clock slider between 2600-2700mhz, 960mv, and 2110mhz Fast Timings on the memory. It would stay at a consistent 2620-2620mhz on benches. When setting the "auto overclock" feature on the software, it would set it as 2508mhz automatically, so I knew immediately I had a pretty good card on my hands.
I think tinkered around a bit more with MPT (More Power Tool) and increased the total wattage output on the card from 300w to 340w, and managed to get it benchmarkable on the slider between 2690-2790mhz and outputting around 2740mhz whilst increasing the voltage to 1085mv. I did manage to then score 20900+ on TimeSpy (screenshot attached) but for some reason I had an issue with System Mark so couldn't validate the score. It wasn't stable though.
Then, put it back down to 2655-2755 on the slider and scored a 20650. This was the most stable I've managed to get it since.
All in all, I must have lucked out with the silicon lottery to pick up a card that decent on OC'ing, so I'm quite happy to have paid the extra £100 for it in hindsight.
coil whine, oh yeah, the whine is strong in this one, but I also game with headsets, so noise while gaming is not an issue, what I want is quiet while working. Seems all reference 6800 XT have coil whine. Was thinking of doing some coil modding, but seems overkill right now.I am using EK-DDC 3.2 PWM pump. EK branded Laing with extra EK heat sink mounted at the bottom to help with cooling of the motor and prolong the life of it.
I have the PWM from DDC connected to my ASUS Crosshair VIII hero CPU fan port.
I have in AI Suite a profile to control the speed of cooling fans and pump depending on CPU temperatures.
When doing normal office stuff like surfing, the loop is quiet and ramp up higher when gaming.
I allow it ramp up quite high while gaming, producing more noise but optimum temperatures.
I game in any case with headset so it does not disturb much.
One thing that I noticed after I went water cooling with 6800XT reference card is that there is significant coil whine.
With original cooler it was hidden behind the noise of cooler but the Vardar fans from cooling loop don't make that high noise and I hear it always if I run some 3D task like Time Spy whie not wearing headset.
Regarding pump, might have not made the ideal choice, but as long as it moves water and the temps are at least decent, I can live with it until I can get a stronger pump, if needed. Right now I have a Corsair H90 AIO on the 6800XT, thats only a 140mm rad, has absolutely no issues with cooling the gpu chip, but the Vram chips need better cooling.