Random Murderer
The Anti-Midas
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2006
- Messages
- 6,974 (1.07/day)
- Location
- Florida, A.K.A. the Sweatbox
System Name | TOO MUCH RADIATOR! | The TV Box a.k.a. The Shoebox |
---|---|
Processor | Core i7 4930K @ 4.5GHz | Core i5 6600K @ 4.5GHz |
Motherboard | Asus X79 Rampage IV Extreme | Asus Z170i Pro Gaming |
Cooling | Custom water on CPU and GPU, dual 360mm radiators | Corsair H80i |
Memory | 4x 8GB G.Skill TridentX DDR3-1600 | 2x 4GB G.Skill RipJaws 4 DDR4-3000 |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire AMD R9 295x2 | PowerColor AMD HD7970 |
Storage | Samsung SSD 830 256GB, various others | 2x 1TB Seagate Barracudas in RAID1 |
Display(s) | Dell U2713HM 2560x1440 IPS | Panasonic TC-L32E5 1080p IPS TV |
Case | Thermaltake Suppressor F51 (stripped down to hold two radiators) | Cooler Master Elite 130 |
Audio Device(s) | RM-DAC -> Xiang Sheng 708b -> Sennheiser HD650 | HDMI sound device on 7970 |
Power Supply | LEPA G1600-MA 1600W | Corsair CX750M 750W |
Software | Win 10 64 |
Benchmark Scores | over 9000 BungholioMarks, "Bitchin' Fast" |
A few people have asked me how to perform this mod, and I'm kind of sick of finding the same things over and over, so I thought "What the hell? I'll write a tutorial!"
First things first:
I AM IN NO WAY RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DAMAGE CAUSED BY READING THIS GUIDE, PERFORMING ANY ACTIONS MENTIONED WITHIN, OR FOR GENERAL STUPIDITY. NEITHER IS TECHPOWERUP.COM. YOU PERFORM ALL MODS AT YOUR OWN RISK.
Things you'll need:
1) A BRAIN AND THE ABILITY TO FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS.
2) A digital multimeter(DMM) that can measure VDC and resistance.
3) A pencil, preferably 4H, but 4B works, and others have reported 2B working.
4) Adequate cooling for the voltage you choose.
5) A SOFT eraser. I used a "White Pearl" eraser.
6) A can of compressed air.
7) Either a printer or another computer, so you can view this while you're modding your card
8) Time and Patience.
9) A steady hand.
10) A set of... well, you get the idea
REFERENCE PICTURES:
Your default values may, and probably will, vary.
Second picture courtesy of FreakSavior.
Procedure:
Measure the 3D voltage of your card, make sure you are running a 3D intensive application, like the 3D window in ATiTool or the Fur Benchmark.
Do this by taking the negative lead of your DMM and grounding it to your computer chassis, and taking the positive lead of your DMM and touching it to one of the four measure points in the picture until the value displayed on your DMM stabilizes. Write this value down.
Shut down your system and remove your card. Test the resistance of R1222. The value should be around 1.5 KΩ. Write your value down. Grab your pencil and LIGHTLY shade resistor R1222. You may need to rough up the resistor slightly with a fine file. Blow off the excess pencil lead now and then and measure the resistance, for now we're shooting for .5 KΩ less than your default. Keep repeating the shading process until you reach this point.
Once you reach this point, the moment of truth arrives. Re-install your card, boot your system, and be sure to watch your temperatures as soon as Windows is booted. Run the fuzzy cube in ATiTool and re-test your VCore with the method from earlier and begin your overclocking!
If you don't have enough voltage, or you think you can push it further, you can always remove your card and continue shading to drop the resistance even more, just keep in mind that the temperature scaling is in no way linear to the amount of voltage, it is more exponential.
My Results:
Resistance stock: 1.5 KΩ
Voltage stock: 1.35 V under load
Core speed stock: 775 MHz
Resistance after mod: .933 KΩ
Voltage after mod: 1.44 V under load
Clock speed after mod: 891 MHz
Removal / Reversal of the Mod:
Just erase it! Make sure to erase lightly so as not to damage the resistor and test the resistance after erasing.
Things to Keep in Mind:
You'll need the fixed bios to reach speeds above 864MHz, so if you keep locking up here, it's not a lack of voltage.
This mod is easily reversed, and undetectable(once removed) if done correctly.
The temperature scaling is in no way linear to the amount of voltage.
BIOS Mods:
WARNING: Do not attempt to flash your card unless you know EXACTLY what you are doing.
I have put together and uploaded a .ZIP that contains ATIWinFlash 2.0.0.2, the PLL fix bios(named RV670 XT.BIN), and two overclocked BIOS files, one that runs 875/1250 and one that runs 860/1200, both named after their speeds(one is 8751250.sb, the other is 8601200.sb). Thanks to IAX-Tech for the modified BIOS files.
NOTE: These BIOS files DO NOT modify the voltages, just clock speeds, so it is still necessary to perform the volt mod.
I have also included a new .ZIP file that has a 38xx BIOS editing program. This does not work for the X2, so users of that beast should look elsewhere(sorry guys!).
This guide is a constant work-in-progress; if you have any questions or suggestions, don't hesitate to post them here or PM me.
Thanks to the guys over on XtremeSystems for putting their cards on the line to figure all this out.
BIOS editor
First things first:
I AM IN NO WAY RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DAMAGE CAUSED BY READING THIS GUIDE, PERFORMING ANY ACTIONS MENTIONED WITHIN, OR FOR GENERAL STUPIDITY. NEITHER IS TECHPOWERUP.COM. YOU PERFORM ALL MODS AT YOUR OWN RISK.
Things you'll need:
1) A BRAIN AND THE ABILITY TO FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS.
2) A digital multimeter(DMM) that can measure VDC and resistance.
3) A pencil, preferably 4H, but 4B works, and others have reported 2B working.
4) Adequate cooling for the voltage you choose.
5) A SOFT eraser. I used a "White Pearl" eraser.
6) A can of compressed air.
7) Either a printer or another computer, so you can view this while you're modding your card
8) Time and Patience.
9) A steady hand.
10) A set of... well, you get the idea
REFERENCE PICTURES:
Your default values may, and probably will, vary.
Second picture courtesy of FreakSavior.
Procedure:
Measure the 3D voltage of your card, make sure you are running a 3D intensive application, like the 3D window in ATiTool or the Fur Benchmark.
Do this by taking the negative lead of your DMM and grounding it to your computer chassis, and taking the positive lead of your DMM and touching it to one of the four measure points in the picture until the value displayed on your DMM stabilizes. Write this value down.
Shut down your system and remove your card. Test the resistance of R1222. The value should be around 1.5 KΩ. Write your value down. Grab your pencil and LIGHTLY shade resistor R1222. You may need to rough up the resistor slightly with a fine file. Blow off the excess pencil lead now and then and measure the resistance, for now we're shooting for .5 KΩ less than your default. Keep repeating the shading process until you reach this point.
Once you reach this point, the moment of truth arrives. Re-install your card, boot your system, and be sure to watch your temperatures as soon as Windows is booted. Run the fuzzy cube in ATiTool and re-test your VCore with the method from earlier and begin your overclocking!
If you don't have enough voltage, or you think you can push it further, you can always remove your card and continue shading to drop the resistance even more, just keep in mind that the temperature scaling is in no way linear to the amount of voltage, it is more exponential.
My Results:
Resistance stock: 1.5 KΩ
Voltage stock: 1.35 V under load
Core speed stock: 775 MHz
Resistance after mod: .933 KΩ
Voltage after mod: 1.44 V under load
Clock speed after mod: 891 MHz
Removal / Reversal of the Mod:
Just erase it! Make sure to erase lightly so as not to damage the resistor and test the resistance after erasing.
Things to Keep in Mind:
You'll need the fixed bios to reach speeds above 864MHz, so if you keep locking up here, it's not a lack of voltage.
This mod is easily reversed, and undetectable(once removed) if done correctly.
The temperature scaling is in no way linear to the amount of voltage.
BIOS Mods:
WARNING: Do not attempt to flash your card unless you know EXACTLY what you are doing.
I have put together and uploaded a .ZIP that contains ATIWinFlash 2.0.0.2, the PLL fix bios(named RV670 XT.BIN), and two overclocked BIOS files, one that runs 875/1250 and one that runs 860/1200, both named after their speeds(one is 8751250.sb, the other is 8601200.sb). Thanks to IAX-Tech for the modified BIOS files.
NOTE: These BIOS files DO NOT modify the voltages, just clock speeds, so it is still necessary to perform the volt mod.
I have also included a new .ZIP file that has a 38xx BIOS editing program. This does not work for the X2, so users of that beast should look elsewhere(sorry guys!).
This guide is a constant work-in-progress; if you have any questions or suggestions, don't hesitate to post them here or PM me.
Thanks to the guys over on XtremeSystems for putting their cards on the line to figure all this out.
BIOS editor
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