Nvidia Corp.’s recently unveiled GM204 graphics processing unit and GeForce GTX 980 graphics card have proven to be excellent performers and also great overclockers. This week an enthusiast from Sweden managed to boost clock-rate of the GeForce GTX 980 graphics processing unit to whopping 2.20GHz, a new world’s record.
Elmor, an overclocker from SweClockers.com team, has managed to increase GPU clock-rate of Asus GeForce GTX 980 Direct CU II graphics card by 81.58 per cent from default, to 2208MHz. He also managed to increase effective GDDR5 memory frequency to 8392MHz, a 19.27 per cent boost. To achieve his remarkable overclocking result, Elmor used liquid nitrogen cooling. The core voltage of the GM204 GPU was 1.2120V.
Using a system based on Intel Core i7-5960X clocked at 5586MHz (also cooled by LN2), Elmor managed to score 9568 in 3DMark FireStrike Extreme, another world’s record, reports Hwbot.
Earlier this year Nvidia Corp.’s GK110 graphics processing unit has managed to conquer 2.0GHz frequency, setting the world’s record. The GM204 graphics chip is smaller than the GK110 and contains fewer transistors, therefore, it is not surprising that it can work at even higher frequencies. Moreover, thanks to increased efficiency of Nvidia’s Maxwell architecture, the GM204 can actually be faster than the GK110 in benchmarks when overclocked.
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KitGuru Says: Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 graphics cards have existed on the market for less than a month. Professional overclockers only start to push them to the max. Eventually, it is highly likely that the GM204 GPU will set a number of other records.
Its funny because that isn’t the world record… http://www.3dmark.com/hall-of-fame-2/fire+strike+3dmark+score+extreme+preset/version+1.1/1+gpu might wanna get your facts right Anton Shilov lol but have fun looking at them clock speeds, I think you will find they’re higher then this persons “World Record” OC.
That’s World record for frequency of the GPU core clock. K|NGP|N has a slightly higher score in Fire Strike Extreme because he has a 52 MHz lower core clock (so he is not holding the core clock WR) but 105 MHz higher memory clock on the card. The latter as it seems affects the Fire Strike score almost identically as the former, so -50 and +100 results in a +50 score, roughly.
Holy crap your actually completely right I actually didn’t see that difference I think im going blind lol.
I overclocked my GTX 1080 to 3.3 GHz… This page is out of date.