How to Overclock Your Video Card
By Gabriel Torres on November 28, 2006 Page 4 of 12

Memory Overclocking

Sometimes the video card's memory chips are running at speed lower than their maximum. For example, you have a video card with a memory chip capable of running up to 500 MHz but the memory is being accessed at 450 MHz.

If you were lucky to get one card like this you will find that the memory is highly overclockable. This happens because you will be able to put the memory running at a higher clock rate but still under its specs, and then push the memory over its specs.

First you need to know the maximum clock rate of the memory chips of your video card. You can find this out by taking a close look on the chips. The speed grade is marked on the chip's body after a dash (ex: -40, -50, -5, etc) as a number. This number is the memory clock, in nanoseconds. To find out the maximum clock rate in megahertz, divide one thousand by this number. In case of a two-digit number like 40, 45, 50, use a decimal dot between the two digits. So, for the calculation you would use 4.0, 4.5 and 5.0, respectively. There is one exception: memory chips from Samsung labeled as 2A actually are 2.8 ns chips, not 2 ns chips.

Pay attention because the number you will find is the real memory clock, not its DDR speed, which is the double of the number you will find.

Let's give you a couple of examples to clarify this. On Figure 6 you see two of the memory chips used on our GeForce 6800 GS. They are labeled as 2 ns, so their maximum labeled clock rate is 500 MHz (1,000 / 2). As we discussed before, on this video card the memory was accessed at 500 MHz, so in this case the memory was already working at its maximum labeled speed. Of course we can try to put it to work above its specs.

Video Memory Chip
click to enlarge
Figure 6: 2 ns (500 MHz) chips from Samsung.

On Figure 7 you see one of the memory chips from a GeForce 7900 GT. As you can see, it is a 1.4 ns chip, meaning that it can officially run up to 715 MHz. Since on our GeForce 7900 GT the memory was accessed at 660 MHz, we know that we can push the memory clock at least up to 715 MHz that the video card will still work just fine, as the memory clock will still be inside the chips’ official specs. Of course we can still try pushing the memory clock even higher for a real overclocking.

Video Memory Chip
click to enlarge
Figure 7: 1.4 ns (715 MHz) chip from Samsung.

On the next page we will present some tricks that can help you to achieve a higher memory clock.


Originally at http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/141/4Pages (12): 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 » ... Last »

© 2004-8, Hardware Secrets, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Total or partial reproduction of the contents of this site, as well as that of the texts available for downloading, be this in the electronic media, in print, or any other form of distribution, is expressly forbidden. Those who do not comply with these copyright laws will be indicted and punished according to the International Copyrights Law.

We do not take responsibility for material damage of any kind caused by the use of information contained in Hardware Secrets.