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Your cpu will hold you back for sure in Valley not to mention some actual games. In many cases you would have seen zero difference by just getting a 1070. Heck you cant even stay above 45 fps in parts of Crysis 3 with your cpu where as a newer i7 would have you above 60 fps the whole time. You really need to upgrade to a 6700k and at least 3200 mhz memory if you want to get full use of your 1080 in all games.
He has a i5 2500K @ 4.6Ghz...Sandy Bridge is only 19% slower relative to Skylake. I'd say he is just fine.
(start at 3 minutes)
- clock for clock benchmarks in modern games using a 980 Ti. Fallout 4 Skylake (6600K) is 9 FPS faster than Sandy Bridge (2500K). Add a 600 MHz OC and you're well on your way to making that statistically insignificant.
And I had a 2500k at 4.4 and know first hand that it gets pegged in some games and will cause some stutter when cpu limited. And that was on just a gtx780. Digitalfoundry already mention this is an issue older i5 users will run into in their videos. Personally I think its stupid to spend 700 bucks on a gpu that will be held back by the cpu and in some cases it will be playable limitation.He has a i5 2500K @ 4.6Ghz...Sandy Bridge is only 19% slower relative to Skylake. I'd say he is just fine.
(start at 3 minutes)
- clock for clock benchmarks in modern games using a 980 Ti. Fallout 4 Skylake (6600K) is 9 FPS faster than Sandy Bridge (2500K). Add a 600 MHz OC and you're well on your way to making that statistically insignificant.
On average FPS it is only impacted a little with a heavily OCed 2500K, yes. But on minimum FPS (drops, or inverted spikes if you will) there is a much larger difference, even heavily overclocked.
On a Gsync monitor it probably wont be noticeable at all as long as the drops aren't below 30 FPS.
I've come from a 3930K @4.3GHz, a 1650 V2 @4.5GHz (4930K equivalent), and now have a 5820K @4.4GHz- and I've noticed a difference in FPS minimums. I do not game on a Gsync capable TV (boy I wish those were a thing!). Granted some games are, and will continue to be, CPU bound to hell and back.
I'll put this here for a better cross section of (actual) CPU bound games and non CPU bound games in a MUCH, MUCH more palatable format:
But let's be fair here you won't be running the 2500k at 4.5ghz it would be running at something like 4.8 to 5ghz. They clocked so easily.
From my limited sample set of 4 sandybridge chips, 2 x 2600k's which do 5 Ghz, on water yes, but a £50 AIO. Also have a 3930k which does 5.2Ghz, and had another 3930k which did 5Ghz
Anyone crashing with a temp limit of 82? At stock fan profiles, whenever I hit 82 degrees it throws a driver error. If I turn up the fan I can OC +210/500 no problems but it worries me that 82 degrees is my limit so I can never run the stock profile. EVGA FE edition for with +120 power and 92 temp limit set in afterburner.
So you have a EVGA card that crashes at 82 and a PNY card that does not exhibit the temp issue? Interesting.
Any other EVGA FE owners want to chime in if their card will crash to desktop on stock fan profiles?
My only gripe is the crappy PrecisionX software that won't let me save profiles and constantly resets it's self to stock. anyone know of a better OC tool?
I didn't see another thread started on OC results for GTX 1080s, so I thought I would start one. the intention is just to post results and not necessarily to discuss.
EVGA Founders Edition
120% Power, 92c Temp, linked with Power as priority
Running quiet fan curve
Stable Results:
+180 GPU (Instability at 200)
+360 MEM (Artifacts at 400)
I backed it down to 150/330 to ensure headroom, at these settings It hits peek boost at 2050 but settle into games at 1974 on GPU and 5335 on MEM and running 82c temp. it idles at 31c temp, for some reason though the fan is always running at 1100 even though the fan curve shows it should be off. I think it's a driver/precisionX bug.
just to extend this post to a much more related i5 battle..
I have a ivybridge 3770k, and clocked at 4.7ghz and a 1080gtx. I have played a lot of newer games maxed out, farcry primal, doom, gta5, overwatch. I have no issues with pulling crazy good low and average fps. The only time you will see a problem is when you are CPU limited. This is usually at lower resolutions and such. when you up the resolution and turn on all the settings, your GPU limited, and having a 1080 over a 980 is a big diference. I know my 25000 firestrike graphics score is proof of that. my 1080 outscores my 970 by over 100% and actually beats out my 970 sli 3dmark scores.
so for those saying, oh theres no point in buying a 1080 if your on an older intel chip, are just mad cause they upgraded and spent all that money to play games and didnt have too, probably why they cant afford a 1080 in the first place.
for games, your golden, and general PC use. if you want to convert video, photo shop, etc,thats where you will see the biggest difference with an upgraded processor. You may see a slight lack in min fps, but nothing game changing. Im running doom 140+ fps, spiking to 200fps (seems to be the in game limit) in nightmare mode at 1440p with 0 issues, and the gameplay experince would be exactly the same on newer chip.
So been playing around with clock speeds on my FE with a 120mm CLC attached. Idle temp is down to 27C and load is 52C in pure silence
But trying to get a decent overclock isn't going very well. On the stock cooler, I had changed the power limit to 120%, fan at 80% to keep temperature at 66C, and was able to get to +225 and have it level out to 2076MHz. This was giving extremely minor artifacting, but Fallout 4 was smooth as butter, I figured I'd bump it down another boost bin and it should have stopped the artifacting.
I added the CLC and have been testing it. Playing Just Cause 3 now (because holy shit is it fun). I tried +225 and it didn't even make it a second into the initial loading screen. Clock speed I think was 2160 in Afterburner when it hard locked. Voltage was set to +100%, but it never goes up - stays at 1.05v absolute maximum overclocked or stock. Afterburner is showing 110-113% power limit usage, so it should still have a little bit of leeway left. I am considering removing the resistors on the board to remove the power limit completely and see if I can find that magical 1.09v limit.
The card settles at the 2062 boost bin when set to +175 (I think it drops two boost bins total when the temperature levels out at 52C). I remember seeing extremely slight artifacting in JC3 (tiny red dots, but only when looking at water), so I may need to drop it by one more bin. The voltage is fluctuating at this speed, going between 1.035ish and 1.05. I will do some more testing once I get back home today and will post up some Afterburner data sets if I can find the raw files.your card boost as high as 2160mhz because your temps allow it, i would actually try to reduce the core offset and have it settle between 2075-2140. I really doubt more power would over ride something built into the architecture.
The card settles at the 2062 boost bin when set to +175 (I think it drops two boost bins total when the temperature levels out at 52C). I remember seeing extremely slight artifacting in JC3 (tiny red dots, but only when looking at water), so I may need to drop it by one more bin. The voltage is fluctuating at this speed, going between 1.035ish and 1.05. I will do some more testing once I get back home today and will post up some Afterburner data sets if I can find the raw files.
That's one reason I've waited this long to start playing JC3.I wouldn't use JC3 as a gauge for your OC, that game can be a little buggy for any config. I like to use Witcher 3 for dailing in my maximum OC for that same reason though, instead of hard crashing it usually gives off little artifacts (red dots) when your gpu is just above what it can do.