NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070, Stuck at 600 Mhz Core Clock?

lMerkah

Commendable
Oct 29, 2016
18
0
1,510
I recently used a benchmark program called 3DMark, and the got my score of 5544. I then checked the details and compared to others of the same CPU and GPU and noticed my Core Clock is on 600Mhz where as others have a Core Clock of 2k+. Is there an issue with my pc somewhere?

PC Build:

Windows 10 Pro 64-Bit
Intel Core i7 4770
16GB DDR3 RAM
Gigabyte Technology Z87-HD3 MB
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070
120GB Kingston SSD
1TB Seagate HDD

My results can be found here from 3DMark: http://www.3dmark.com/spy/1518517

Compared to: http://www.3dmark.com/spy/1369597

I just have an odd feeling something is wrong and that I should be getting more fps during games. Currently running NVIDIA driver version 378.92.

Help would be much appreciated.
 
Solution
Simple solution.

1. Download Nvidia Inspector.
2. Set a shortcut to it.
3. In shortcut arguments, write "-restartdisplaydriver" without quotes. See if it works.

If it's still stuck,
1. create a shortcut to nvidiainspector,
2. in arguments, type "-forcepstate:0,2" without quotes.
3. Click "show overclocking" in NvidiaInspector and on top right, select Performance Level 2 [P2] State.
4. Click "Unlock Max" on top right.
5. Search your GPU's default clock speeds online, set them in the overclocking section (core and memory clocks).
6. click "apply clocks and voltage" bottom right of the nvidiainspector window.

If setting clocks directly doesn't work and the slider snaps back to the previous clock, increase 5, 10 or 20 MHz and click...

lMerkah

Commendable
Oct 29, 2016
18
0
1,510


40-50 degrees idle
around 60 degrees when playing games/under load
 

lMerkah

Commendable
Oct 29, 2016
18
0
1,510
http://www.3dmark.com/3dm/19121371? After a restart, core clock goes to around 2k, but now the Memory Bus Clock is low? Im terribly confused.
 

Achint2000

Distinguished
Feb 10, 2013
692
2
19,165
Simple solution.

1. Download Nvidia Inspector.
2. Set a shortcut to it.
3. In shortcut arguments, write "-restartdisplaydriver" without quotes. See if it works.

If it's still stuck,
1. create a shortcut to nvidiainspector,
2. in arguments, type "-forcepstate:0,2" without quotes.
3. Click "show overclocking" in NvidiaInspector and on top right, select Performance Level 2 [P2] State.
4. Click "Unlock Max" on top right.
5. Search your GPU's default clock speeds online, set them in the overclocking section (core and memory clocks).
6. click "apply clocks and voltage" bottom right of the nvidiainspector window.

If setting clocks directly doesn't work and the slider snaps back to the previous clock, increase 5, 10 or 20 MHz and click apply again and again until it reaches the default clocks.

This must work. Good luck :)
 
Solution
Dec 7, 2018
1
0
10


what mean arguments where i can find this