

They are mainly used to compare the performance of computer systems across different hardware. Frequently Asked QuestionsĪnswer: A benchmark app is used for testing computer performance. You should also check whether your operating system is supported before downloading a benchmarking app. You might try what this guy recomends in post two, though it requires a bit of registry edditing.Pro-Tip: Look at the supported graphics card and processor before downloading a free GPU benchmark tool. You might try other third party overclocking tools, though I am not sure what ones are out there anymore, specialy for third party AMD besids afterburner. It is worth noting however that my specific laptop has pretty decent cooling, with physically seperated heatpipe and fin assembelies for CPU and GPU, with each venting independent of the other on opisote sides of the system.Īs for the OP, have you checked to see if WattMan is available in the defualt radeon drivers? Afterburner will work with Radeon cards, but its a bit limmited on them normally, even on the desktop platform. In games it offers between 30 and 100% imptorvement, depending on title, and makes the system *just* powerfull enough with the OC to play BF1 native 1600*900 without too many issues at all.Īs for heat, on my system it raises core temps by ~10c for max OC, and sees load temps in the low 80's instead of low 70's, all of which is fine for a 400 series chip. Memory see similar substantial overclocks. My travel gaming rig is an old Asus ROG G73SW with Nvidia GTX-460m graphics and I can use Afterrburner to overclock it from 650Mhz core to 900Mhz core without issues for most games, and 850 core without issues at all for any games or applications. Notebook GPU's can be overclocked, and with some systems it has little impact on heat and a signifigant impact on performance. There isn't enough Cooling Margin for a decent overclock, and there isn't enough power to get a good yield. Even if you could overclock it(I'm skeptical) you wouldn't get any benefit. 引用自 Wolfie:I'm sorry, but that isn't going to work.
