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Overclocking ATI: Radeon HD 3850

Overclocking ATI: Radeon HD 3850

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Gigabyte GV-RX385512HAfter we’ve forced all these pages with a strong Nvidia coloration to them on you ATI fans, it’s finally time to look at how to overclock a Radeon. We chose the Gigabyte HD 3850 from our reference system for the occasion. This card has a very good performance/price ratio, and it’s tempting to try to improve it even more by overclocking it.

Overclocking a Radeon is very similar to the process you use for a GeForce. So we recommend that anybody who has skipped the preceding pages go back and read them, since they’ll be in a better position to understand what follows if they do.

Overdrive or Overclocking for Dummies

The first step is to do a software-based overclocking, as described above. There are several choices for doing this. The first is the official AMD drivers. The Catalyst drivers include an "Overdrive" tab that’s pretty well designed. The first time you launch it, you’ll have to unlock access to the control panel by clicking the lock button.

ATI Catalyst OverdriveCatalyst OverDrive Auto-Tune

Once you’ve done that, there are two possibilities: You can enter the frequencies for the GPU and memory yourself, or you can let the “Auto-Tune” function do it. We opted for the second approach. Auto-tune is effective and very convenient. It increases the frequencies in small steps and automatically tests stability at each step. When it’s found the maximum the card can handle, it moves back a step so as to ensure fully reliable operation, at the expense of a little performance. This makes Auto-Tune the ideal solution for beginners, and it’s also a way of “roughing out” further tweaking, since the automation saves a lot of time.

AMD Overdrive autotune

We hereby award another good point to the Catalyst drivers: As soon as you enter your changes, the overclocking settings are automatically recorded and reloaded at each boot-up, without having to tinker with any additional settings. What’s more, you keep the Radeon-specific PowerPlay system, which lowers the card’s operating frequencies when you’re only running 2D. So most of the time, our Radeon HD 3850 was running at only 297/693 MHz, instead of 670/700 MHz.

Easy but Limited

The Auto-tune feature of Overdrive let us push our Gigabyte Radeon HD 3850 from 670/700 MHz (GPU/Memory) to 719/870 MHz (715.5/864 MHz actual). And all in less than three minutes. Note that the memory of our Gigabyte card was abnormally slow from the factory, since ATI recommends 833 MHz for the memory on its Radeon HD 3850s. So the gain wasn’t much on the memory, and not really much more for the GPU. The latter is an RV670, which runs at 775 MHz on the Radeon HD 3870, so we were hoping for better. For that, we’ll have to forget Catalyst, which won’t let us set the GPU frequency above 730 MHz.


Talkback
mi1ez 25/04/2008 02:52
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mi1ez

A very insightful article. May have to experiment pushing my 3850 a bit further!

David345 25/04/2008 03:32
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David345

I havent read all of the article so forgive me if it already answers this questtion but what would be better overclocking a graphics card yourself or buying one factory overclocked?. Also couldn't there have been a list of the overclockability of some graphics cards

spudd91 26/04/2008 10:35
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spudd91

Will overclocking in BIOS overclock all cards in case of SLI mode?

Solitaire 30/04/2008 06:33
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Solitaire

Funny, my 3850 could be pushed to 820MHz GPU within Catalyst's Overdrive page, not 730MHz. And Overdrive's Auto-Tune is very, VERY optimistic too - it pushed my stock-voltage 3850 to 775MHz core. Worked in SupCom:FA for three whole minutes! XD

mi1ez: Be careful, many 3850s have bad overheat issues under OC, and mistakenly pumping up the voltage will make that situation worse. I found out the hard way... With boosted voltage a 3850 can reach crazy speeds... if you decided to use watercooling, that is...

David345: Manufacturer-OC will yield lower speeds than DIY while costing a whole lot more. But the cards are usually much more stable and if you don't mess with them then its not your problem if the card gets borked. DIY saves (money)... unless you bork the card, in which case, good luck. You'll need it... :o

sdack 01/05/2008 04:06
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sdack

David345 :
I havent read all of the article so forgive me if it already answers this questtion but what would be better overclocking a graphics card yourself or buying one factory overclocked?. Also couldn't there have been a list of the overclockability of some graphics cards


Of course, getting hardware that is already overclocked by the manufacturer is better. It however costs you considerably more money, too. Money which you could have invested into a completely different graphics card perhaps.

I personally avoid manufacturers who overclock hardware since I like to overclock it myself. If you then buy a card from a manufacturer that sells overclocked as well as standard hardware you will get only a little gain out of their standard offerings simply because they ones with a high gain got sorted out. Therefore best for overclocking is hardware that is being sold only as standard without an option of getting an overclocked version. These provide a better chance for a high gain and cost only little.

reho1990 18/08/2008 02:04
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reho1990

hi i tryed it out yesteday but got a error on gpu-z when i go to save the bios it says (bios reading not supported on this device) i would really like to put it in to the bios but i need that saved file any ideas

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