Conclusion: Maniacal Performance for the People
Conclusion: Maniacal Performance for the People
In its stock form the GTX 580 is already a hugely powerful video card but when you add overclocking to the equation, the results are simply mind blowing. The performance increases we achieved led to significant framerate gains across every single game and in some situations pushed playability to new heights.
We’re reasonably sure that with some time, effort, proper fan speeds and a bucket full of patience, most buyers of GTX 580 cards will be able to reach the levels we did in this article. These new NVIDIA cards are overclocking monsters and some phenomenal numbers can be squeezed out of them without resorting to over the top cooling methods. High clock speeds do lead to some over-the-top power consumption numbers but when you are pushing the limits, who the heck cares about something as trivial as a power bill?
The ASUS GTX 580 we used for this test deserves special mention since it was a more than willing participant in our little overclocking experiment. It wasn’t unique either since all of our GTX 580 cards hit approximately the same speeds when a bit of extra voltage was applied.
Believe it or not we’re actually starting to feel at home with the Smart Doctor software, no matter how much it has been bad-mouthed around here in the past. Sure its sliders are minuscule and the OSD is dominated by a mostly pointless readout but ASUS consistently has one of the only pieces of software that supports overclocking AND voltage tweaking on new architectures. To us, that counts for a lot even though it is locked to ASUS products.
There has been quite a bit of fuss made about NVIDIA’s implementation of current draw protection on their GTX 580 cards. It is supposed to limit the amount of power the GF110 core can consume but it really does seem to be a non-issue here - even when pushing the card above and beyond its reference clocks. From our experience, the casual overclockers among us who stick to air cooling will likely run into a heat wall long before NVIDIA’s supposed limiter kicks in. Once pushed to extremes, there may very well be a time when the protection routines scream “enough is enough” but even at 951Mhz, we didn’t see any type of limitation whatsoever. For the time being though, we have yet to come up with any evidence to suggest throttling will kick in when using any application outside of FurMark or OCCT’s GPU stress tool.
In all too many situations, trying to push the clock frequencies of many current graphics cards can often lead to a lesson in frustration. This isn’t the case with the GTX 580. Considering the easily attainable and massive performance boost an overclocked GTX 580 can put forward, we’re sure this will draw quite a few more people into waiting embrace of overclocking. If anything, the abilities of this new card will allow it to act like a shot of adrenalin for many enthusiast circles and for that alone it deserves our praise.