How far can the GTX 670 over clock

Hello, I am currently getting ready to build my gaming PC and was wondering if i could over clock the ASUS GeForce GTX 670 DirectCU II 2GB it to: Base Clock 1006MHz, Boost Clock 1084MHz and the Memory Clock to 6208MHz. Is this possible and could I over clock the GPU even further and do you have any tips on Voltage as well. The over clock does not have to be this, it is just the minimum clock speeds I would like. If I can over clock it further please tell me.

Thanks :)

You could easily get that thing to 1150 MHz. As far as voltage goes i don't have the sleightest clue. But you can overclock those ASUS cards like bananas. There up there with the MSI Twin frozrs, if not better than them.

Better far. I have the reference EVGA card, like in the vid, and I got it to 1215Mhz core and 6258 memory, and it was barely reaching 70c. That's before I switched the thermal paste too.

I don't know if they're simlair, but I got my 660ti to 1241 MHz and my memory to 6442 MHz. I get about 10 -15 more frames in most games. some games like COD4 isn't stable so I have to turn it off when I'm palying that.

Just get MSI Afterburner and Kombustor. Go up little by little and when kombustor crashes tone it down, every card is different.

Alright then, Thanks for all your responses guys :D

Every card is different, it's all about the quality of the silicon.  People can sit here and post all day what they get doesn't mean yours will do better or even reach that.

Your max overclock may only be 25mhz above your boost clock.  Your only garunteed what it's spec'd to run at out of the box nothing more.

My GTX 670 FTW has the same shipped frequencies as that Asus, it hits 1163mhz on it's own with out any adjustment.  But it won't do 1240mhz, 1220mhz was the max before it would artifact running Heaven.

Not just the silicon, also the VRM's.  Nvidia have put basic VRM's to control the power that the GPU recieves which is why the power they recieve is limited to up to 122% (which works out at 170W)  If you have a card with non standard VRM's like some Asus and MSI boards are equipped with then you might have some luck editing the bios and increasing the voltage or power limit slightly.  Just be sure the cooling can handle it and don't try anything too extreme.  Gently does it.  Luckily with EVGA you do get a great warranty.

(7 months ago)