Overclocking
Overclocking results listed in this section are achieved with the default fan and voltage settings as defined in the VGA BIOS. We choose this approach as it is the most realistic scenario for the majority of users.
Every sample overclocks differently, which is why our results here can only serve as a guideline for what you can expect from your card.
On NVIDIA cards with Boost, the values discussed is the highest observed boost clock after overclocking.
Maximum overclock of our sample is 1170 MHz GPU clock (6% overclock) and 1780 MHz on the memory (17% overclock).
GPU overclocking reaches levels similar to previous Hawaii cards, so no improvement there. Memory overclocking seems to be held back by BIOS timing settings, as there is a hard wall at 1780 MHz. 1780 MHz runs perfectly fine, but 1781 MHz immediately crashes the card.
Maximum Overclock Comparison |
---|
| Max. GPU Clock | Max. Memory Clock |
---|
MSI R9 390X Gaming | 1170 MHz | 1780 MHz |
---|
MSI R9 290X Lightning | 1170 MHz | 1690 MHz |
---|
Sapphire R9 290X Tri-X OC | 1135 MHz | 1555 MHz |
---|
PowerColor R9 290X PCS+ | 1180 MHz | 1645 MHz |
---|
ASUS R9 290X DC II | 1090 MHz | 1480 MHz |
---|
AMD R9 290X | 1125 MHz | 1575 MHz |
---|
Important: Each GPU (including each GPU of the same make and model) will overclock slightly
differently based on random production variances. This table just serves to provide a list of typical
overclocks for similar cards, determined during TPU review.
Using these clock frequencies, we ran a quick test of Battlefield 3 to evaluate the gains from overclocking.
Actual 3D performance gained from overclocking is 5.1%.