Hey I want to know what the best test is to check if my GPU is cooling good and not is overheating.
You can observe it for your particular game using msi afterburner's rivatuner?Thanks but how can I see of my GPU is cooling good for longer game times
i have a asrock phantom gaming rx580 and after one benchmark run it hits max 80 degreesMost modern GPUs (you haven't said what you have) will lower their clock frequency to reduce power consumption [heat] once a certain temp has been reached and the fans are already at max. That's usually in the upper 80s C.
Can I just ask what your GPU temps actually are?
ok thx for respons but wat if i undervolt my card to much will it harm my card i am new to this edtit:i have read the post and i dont understand everything. so can someone give me setting that will work. and how about warrantyOne thing you'll want to do is download GPUz here so you can monitor frequencies and voltages. Take note of your current situation when running a stress test (frequency & voltage).
Check out this guide on how to undervolt your GPU. Don't worry, there's no harm in this, and you can reduce power consumption by 30-50W. The voltages in that guide will be the same for your card (the RX480 and RX580 are exactly the same) with the exception of the fact that your card will have a 1400MHz performance state. Set that voltage at 1150mV. (Once you get above ~950mV, the curve is about 1mV per 1MHz.
Hey sorry for the late respons but school begins in my country so i was bussy. but the 7 frequency states of my rx 58 are. status 1=600 status 2=900 status 3=1145 status 4=1215 status 5=1255 status6=1300 status 7=1380As I said above, there's no harm in undervolting (unlike adding voltage when you overclock). IF you take away too much voltage, [most of the time] the game you're playing will freeze for a couple seconds, then the screen will go black for a couple seconds, (during this time, the AMD driver is resetting everything back to Auto), then it will bring you back to your game, usually in the menu screen (as if you've pressed escape to save or change settings). Other times, the game will just close completely and you'll be looking at your Windows desktop. These events only happen while you're dialing in your settings (just like when you OC or undervolt a CPU) since you're making adjustments to prevent these instabilities from happening. When you've got a stable profile, you can save it, and apply it anytime with just a couple clicks.
For reference, my MSI RX480 GamingX does 1305MHz @ 1030mV and 73C after 10 minutes on FurMark stress test with fans at 1100rpm.
If you want to skip a lot of testing, once you've read through the guide I linked earlier, you can post the 7 frequency states of your card here and I'll give you voltages to enter for each that should be stable.