- Jan 16, 2005
- 2,635
- 106
- 106
I've built a new system (see specs below) and am working out the kinks.
One of the things I'm trying to do is overclock the internal video card (Radeon 4200). I've oc'd the sideport memory frequency to 1700mhz no problem. Every review and thread I've read about this motherboard/vc says that's no problem.
I've also oc'd the vc frequency too. The base frequency is 500mhz. But some have been able to oc this to 900mhz. Some reviews say 800 is as high as they can go.
I realize that all overclocks are different and ymmv. When I set the vc frequency to 750mhz after a few minutes my screen will flicker and the ATI video driver will error and self recover. I've since lowered the frequency to 700mhz and haven't experienced any symptoms.
However, I haven't stress the vc in either scenario, other than running the Windows Experience assessment.
Other than trial and error, is there a good way to stress the video card? The only thing I could think of is to load "Spore" which is a game my kid has....I think it's the most graphically advanced game we have. But I really don't want to load this game just to stress the vc (he's not currently playing it and the game has some digital media rights restrictions associated with it...I think we can only load it 5 times or something).
Are there any "Intel Burn Test for video cards" type applications out there?
One of the things I'm trying to do is overclock the internal video card (Radeon 4200). I've oc'd the sideport memory frequency to 1700mhz no problem. Every review and thread I've read about this motherboard/vc says that's no problem.
I've also oc'd the vc frequency too. The base frequency is 500mhz. But some have been able to oc this to 900mhz. Some reviews say 800 is as high as they can go.
I realize that all overclocks are different and ymmv. When I set the vc frequency to 750mhz after a few minutes my screen will flicker and the ATI video driver will error and self recover. I've since lowered the frequency to 700mhz and haven't experienced any symptoms.
However, I haven't stress the vc in either scenario, other than running the Windows Experience assessment.
Other than trial and error, is there a good way to stress the video card? The only thing I could think of is to load "Spore" which is a game my kid has....I think it's the most graphically advanced game we have. But I really don't want to load this game just to stress the vc (he's not currently playing it and the game has some digital media rights restrictions associated with it...I think we can only load it 5 times or something).
Are there any "Intel Burn Test for video cards" type applications out there?
