I've played with O/C'ing my Geforce4 with OK results. My question is about what effect, if any, does cooling has on the limit of the card. When finding the limit of my Asus Ti4200 I just kept bumping up the memory and core speeds until I started to notice little black dots one one of my game demos. These effects were noticed immediately -- not after stress testing for a while. Bump the slider up a notch to see the black dots... move it down a notch to remove them. I can play a game for hours with my setting one notch below this limit and never have any problems.
So my question is: Does superior cooling allow you to reach higher speeds? Or does it just make the speeds you are able to reach safer to opperate at? Does my limit have very little to do with cooling and very much to do with the design limits of the memory/gpu?
The reason I ask is because my 3 week old Asus card's fan just bit the dust and I don't want to wait for the 3 week turn-around warranty fix. I'm just going to throw a Thermal Take GF4 cooler on it and was wondering if the ram and gpu cooling might allow me to reach a higher o/c.
FYI, if memory serves I can get it to 280/545 with stock cooling. (it has the older, slower ram)
Thanks!
So my question is: Does superior cooling allow you to reach higher speeds? Or does it just make the speeds you are able to reach safer to opperate at? Does my limit have very little to do with cooling and very much to do with the design limits of the memory/gpu?
The reason I ask is because my 3 week old Asus card's fan just bit the dust and I don't want to wait for the 3 week turn-around warranty fix. I'm just going to throw a Thermal Take GF4 cooler on it and was wondering if the ram and gpu cooling might allow me to reach a higher o/c.
FYI, if memory serves I can get it to 280/545 with stock cooling. (it has the older, slower ram)
Thanks!
