UH no all GPUs can be OCed. Also the 660ti was a fail card with cripple memory bus.
I was foreseeing the future gpus, not telling how it currently is.
UH no all GPUs can be OCed. Also the 660ti was a fail card with cripple memory bus.
Ya locked down and proprietary software does not seem good to me.I was foreseeing the future gpus, not telling how it currently is.
IMO though OEMs asked Nvidia for this is what I think.
IMO though OEMs asked Nvidia for this is what I think.
Even if OEMs receive .001% more returns it's still more returns due to OCing or more time wasted on customer service. It was probably just a measure OEMs wanted to save costs because the market of people that it hurts is so extremely tiny (Market of GTX 980M owners/ Now Include ones who OC/ Now include ones who care that it's not allowed to be done anymore = 5 people who care who are affected).
The only people who are going to post online saying they care are caring from an "ideological" perspective. None were actual potential customers of this product. (In this thread anyway).
Yep. But I think its a lost message in the rage.
I really didn't realize people bothered to OC a notebook GPU - for the same reason nvidia just killed it: limited heat dissipation abilities...
Not surprising and I personally don't blame them. Mobile GPU's are already hitting their temp threshold as it is and in many laptops will throttle after extended gaming even at default clocks.
The vendor should be doing the OC, NOT the user. Because if someone burns out their chip, odds are they're going to RMA it for repair, and the vendor will be paying for the user's poor decisions. Don't you think this move by NV might be to benefit the OEMs?
Unless you want a 3 year old gpu, Nvidia is the only option in the high end laptop category.
IMO though OEMs asked Nvidia for this is what I think.
The only people who are going to post online saying they care are caring from an "ideological" perspective. None were actual potential customers of this product. (In this thread anyway).
Yep. But I think its a lost message in the rage.
I can understand why Nvidia is doing it for notebooks.
What is the source for you guys believing this? Especially considering with Kepler we had MSI and EVGA trying to get around nVidia's moratorium on voltage control.
#WTFnvidia Why have you disabled mobile overclocking? You're restricting performance & alienating users http://chn.ge/1F34mfS @nvidia
We've already started a Twitter campaign using #WTFnvidia, so please include that hashtag whenever you're tweeting about this issue.#WTFnvidia Why have you disabled mobile overclocking? You're restricting performance&alienating users http://chn.ge/1F34mfS @NVIDIAGeForce
If this sub-23mm laptop with dual GTX970Ms and a 47W i7 works perfectly fine, what are the chances that a modern high quality high-end gaming laptop with a single 965M, 970M or a 980M will overheat? Really now? :hmm:
That's a little bit strange. CPU temperature is well within the limits and it's the actually the GPUs that are running warm under load. Surprising, then, that the CPU is throttling and the GPUs aren't. Aorus seems more concerned with CPU heat as our logs reveal that the speed of the Intel processor is dialled down as soon as it approaches 70ºC.
It's always a shame to see throttling on a performance-orientated machine, but with the X7 Pro it's a double-whammy as noise levels are also a concern. Load up the cores and the fans do get frustratingly loud.
People who think you can kill a mobile GPU by overclocking it have zero understanding on how notebooks work.
First of all, you have a +135MHz limit on the core clock for mobile GPUs. You`re not killing a GPU by doing +135MHz. To go beyond this limit you will need to reflash it with a modded vbios, and there goes your claim for warranty coverage anyway....
Second, even if you had the option to go beyond that limit, there are temperature limits on the GPU that force shut the whole computer if the thermal sensors read too hot temps.
Third, the only data you can change with a overclocking tool that can kill a mobile GPU is voltage. Which isnt available to change with mobile GPUs. Voltage have been disabled for a long time. To change it, you again need to use a modified vbios. Yes, warranty goes away here too if you go that route.
Forth, there are MANY gamer notebooks that can easily do overclocking and cool off a mobile GPU. Asus G751, MSI GT72, MSI GT80, Alienware 18, Alienware 17, many Clevo notebooks etc etc.
Just because some OEMs are appealing to the Hipster Joe and make their notebooks thin, they can`t drag down the rest of the OEMs and models that can do overclocking easily. Nvidia have no right to disable overclocking broadly across all mobile GPUs because there may exist some thin models that would catch on fire due to bad design.
No. Nvidia are obligated to have overclocking enabled on all drivers, be it mobile or desktop, and let OEMs decide if their models can`t handle overclocking and take precautions like implementing BIOS block from overclocking the GPUs.
This is Nvidia being greedy and we just caught them with their stinky fingers inside the cookie jar. Without overclocking for mobile, they can sell GT 940M to GT 840M (examples) owners. The two GPUs are identical, but the GT 940M run +100MHz higher hence it could persuade some fool to buy a new notebook with GT 940M just to have the "newest" since overclocking is disabled.
This was a stupid move from Nvidia, and I expected more after the GTX 970 accident where they had to come clean about the real ROP specs for the GTX 970 other than what was being advertised in marketing channels and from reviewers.
Shame on you Nvidia
You must be thinking thin and light form factor laptops, not high-end enthusiast laptops that have heatpipes and fans that have allowed huge overclocks on Fermi, Kepler and now Maxwell GPUs. In fact, those heatsink and cooling capabilities for desktop replacement gaming laptops have only improved and yet Maxwell 970M/980M have gotten even more efficient.
The end result is even better overclocking headroom at low temperatures than ever!
High-end enthusiast 970M/980M laptops can handle 40-50% overclocks with temperatures way below 80C.
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Who made this rule?
1. The chips don't overvolt but overclock on stock voltage. Why would they burn out when modern CPUs/GPUs have the ability to throttle clocks at specific thermal points?
2. If you look at NV's desktop GPUs, even going back to GTX280 days, their maximum operating temperatures are 93-105C. 970M/980M OC run well below those levels and usually mobile dGPUs can handle higher loads than 90C.
3. The vendor could offer a disclaimer that overclocking voids warranty or charge $100-200 extra for "overclocking laptop models" that allow the user to overclock if they are so worried about returns.
Do you believe that: (a) AMD will never replace HD7970M in laptops? (b) AMD will never have a good dGPU mobile chip in laptops worth buying? (c) Do you think the only gaming laptops worth buying are those with the fastest single mobile dGPU, nothing 2nd or 3rd or 4th tier?
Sound theory at first until you realize that Asus ROG and MSI specifically advertised overclocking on their laptops.
MSI even had specific mentions of overclocking on their GTX980M SLI laptop on their website but the reference is gone now:
http://us.msi.com/product/nb/GT80-Titan-SLI-GTX-980M-SLI.html#hero-overview
Remember voltage locking on the EVGA Classified 680? It wasn't EVGA who asked NV to remove voltage control. That completely went against EVGA's hardcore overclocking SKU marketing.
Nvidia and Notebookcheck forums are filled with actual users who overclocked 970M/980M products for extra performance. We even have posters here who are upset and they own NV mobile GPUs. Now that NV removed that functionality in perfectly capable, cool and quiet laptops who could have handled that overclocking easily, NV is forcing you to upgrade to a faster product a lot sooner because you can no longer overclock 970M to match 980M or 965M to match 970M, etc.
The more sound explanation is NV did this for $ reasons, not because OEMs asked for it. In fact, OEMs would want overclocking to be as one of the differentiating factors for their high-end enthusiasts laptops.
Proposing the theory that OEMs specifically asked for it when some OEMs advertised overclocking as selling features for their high-end mobile GPU laptops doesn't support your theory. The 2nd reason is that unlike desktop Kepler cards that got neutered in GPU voltage control, Maxwell mobile dGPU parts didn't even have voltage control.
Explain now how OEMs/AIBs are pushing overclocking on GTX960/970/980 and release factory pre-overclocked cards, but suddenly overclocking mobile 900M parts will result in huge number of RMAs? 970M can hit 1.5Ghz on a well ventilated laptop and stays cool and quiet. Considering many GTX970/980 users on our forum have overclocked their cards to 1.4-1.55Ghz, why would a GM204 mobile chip fail prematurely running 1.3-1.5Ghz if the temps are fine and no overvoltage has been applied? Considering NV specifically went out of their way to advertize GTX960's 1.5Ghz overclocking as a selling point, I am supposed to believe now that 900M overclocking is bad for the brand name?
NV can't yet neuter overclocking on GTX900 desktop parts because there is too much competition with AMD for now. You can bet if competition gets to the same level as it is in mobiile right now, NV will neuter overclocking on the desktop too to support market segmentation and higher ASPs due to people stepping up to higher-end SKUs. That is their cunning plan all along.
Right now NV advertizes overclocking on the desktop because cards like 960 are total under-performers compared to competition without it.
"Nvidia announce Geforce GTX 960 cards; boasts 1.5 GHz overclocking potential" :sneaky:
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http://www.pcgamesn.com/nvidia-announce-geforce-gtx-960-cards-boasts-15-ghz-overclocking-potential
$$$, product segmentation, enticing the consumer to pay extra for upgrading from 965M to 970M to 980M to 970M SLI.
There is no source; it's just conjecture.
The arguments that NV limited this due to overheating are completely unsubstantiated.
"- the X7 - at the turn of the year and proclaimed it to be "the world's thinnest SLI gaming laptop."The sub-23mm chassis caught the eye of gamers craving something a little more current-gen in terms of styling, and knowing that it's on to a good thing, Aorus has seen fit to repurpose the chassis with subsequent revamps."
This thin laptop is cooling 2x 970Ms (!) or 150W graphics power usage alone! It gets better as the CPU is a a quad-core Intel Core i7-4870HQ capable of hitting speeds of up to 3.7GHz
For anyone keeping track, that's 219W of gaming at load, cooled by 2 fans and heat pipes, 100% warrantied for 2 years, while running both GPUs at full speed at 87C.
http://www.aorus.com/x7pro.aspx
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http://hexus.net/tech/reviews/laptop/76145-aorus-x7-pro/?page=9
If this sub-23mm laptop with dual GTX970Ms and a 47W i7 works perfectly fine, what are the chances that a modern high quality high-end gaming laptop with a single 965M, 970M or a 980M will overheat? Really now? :hmm:
The comments on NV-favoured forums like TPU are your typical defense of NV and actually some members attack laptop gamers and anyone who is even decided to buy a gaming laptop or overclock their laptop's GPU, as if enthusiast laptop gamers don't even count despite mobile dGPU gaming being > 50% of the entire GPU market! Amazing.
http://www.techpowerup.com/209820/n...bile-gpu-overclocking-with-driver-update.html
What is the source for you guys believing this?
You're actually wrong... Increased temps will reduce the life of the components, not just the GPU but other components as well. Maybe not the first or send or even 10th time. But those extra few C for that little while longer adds up over time. Not to mention the circuitry responsible for providing the power, those get hot too. You seem to be under the impression that the GPU is the only thing affected, it isn't. There's supporting hardware that also take the abuse. Next time you accuse people of having zero understanding, make sure you actually know what you're talking about instead of merely thinking you know what you're talking about.
Another thing you're wrong about... nVIdia having no right to disable overclocking. It's their GPU, designed to work at a certain frequency. They have every right to disable it.
this shouldn't matter on many levels. First, overclocking a laptop is a bad idea. Second, gaming on a laptop is a bad idea. Third, you can still edit the video card bios to put in whatever clocks you want.
To me, the real scandal is how things like powertune and gpu boost can silently throttle your card, making performance inconsistent.
What is up with nvidia these days? It's like they are trying to see how far they can push and how much they can abuse their own customers before they crack
Disabling overclocking? My guess the reasoning for this is they currently stratify mobile GPUs by clockspeed (and often nothing else) so overclocking basically gives you a more expensive gpu. But so what, it should still be binned lower.
I just don't get how a company so beloved by its fans can treat them so poorly.
Does anyone in this thread own a GTX 980m or GTX 970m?