They limit the amount of voltage you can add. The reason you can only add so much voltage is because of NVIDIA's Green Light program. The only time you really need to add voltage is when you start seeing artifacts or you crash, or sometimes when the card is downclocking itself. You don't have to raise the voltage, but 10mv would be good to see if that fixes the frame drop problem. While it doesn't really factor into the overall OC ability, a high scores means you need less volts to achieve higher clocks. I know it isn't top of the line (and never was), but since I game purely at 1080p on a single monitor, it seemed the best choice for quality performance around my price level ($200 - $250). Thanks for all this advice, by the way the GTX 760 is a new beast to me. Since this was on Firestrike, that seems decent, but opinion is welcome. SCORE: 6346 with NVIDIA GeForce GTX 760(1x) and Intel Core i5-2500K Processor I dialed back the mem clock offset in Precision, down to +600 (from +700), and upped the Gpu clock offset to +110 (from +100). ![]() OC Guru II (Gigabyte's program) doesn't let you add too much, which I suppose stops real problems from happening. As per voltage, what would you knock it up by? Most programs seem to not let you add too much - which is good.
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