Question:
Why is MSI Afterburner limiting my GPU to only 2000 MHz memory clock?
Scott
2010-12-07 18:32:14 UTC
Why is MSI Afterburner only showing 1700 Mhz memory clock?
My GPU came with an effective memory clock of 3400 Mhz but MSI Afterburner is only showing 1700 and it can be clocked ONLY TILL 2000 Mhz? Do I have to apply any special tweaking to get the effective 3400 Mhz memory clock? If MSI Afterburner has limited it to only 2000 Mhz then is it possible that I got the wrong GPU? In the graphics card box, its written "3400 Mhz Memory Clock" but my overclocking settings are limited to 2000 Mhz even when I maximised the bar. Please help!
Five answers:
geek-in-training
2010-12-07 19:04:27 UTC
What n/a is trying to say is that a 1700mhz memory clock is 3400mhz "effective" memory clock because of the "DDR" - dual or double data rate. 1700 x 2 = 3400

Stepping it up to 2000mhz would give you 4000mhz (overclocked).
Person
2010-12-07 19:52:35 UTC
What geek-in-training said. DDR doubles the data rate. Maybe you should've figured that out first, because cranking the speed up to 2000mhz like that could be a great way to fry your card.
annan
2016-12-12 19:27:44 UTC
It relies upon in case you higher it or bought/have a pre-overclocked type. once you've/did then definite it would want to boost stability, yet even if that is at inventory p.c. it probable does not help.
?
2010-12-07 18:46:00 UTC
GDDR5 (Graphics Double Data Rate, version 5) SGRAM is a type of high performance dynamic random-access graphics card memory designed for applications requiring high bandwidth. Unlike its predecessor, GDDR4, GDDR5 is based on DDR3 memory which has double the data lines ("DQ" lines) compared to DDR2 but GDDR5 also has 8 bit wide prefetch buffers like GDDR4.[citation needed]



GDDR5 SGRAM conforms to the standards which were set out in the GDDR5 specification by the JEDEC. It uses a 8n prefetch architecture and DDR interface to achieve high performance operation and can be configured to operate in x32 mode or x16 (clamshell) mode which is detected during device initialization. The GDDR5 interface transfers two 32 bit wide data words per write clock (WCK) cycle to/from the I/O pins. Corresponding to the 8n prefetch, a single write or read access consists of a 256 bit wide two CK clock cycle data transfer at the internal memory core and eight corresponding 32 bit wide one-half WCK clock cycle data transfers at the I/O pins.



GDDR5 operates with two different clock types. A differential command clock (CK) to where address and command inputs are referenced, and a forwarded differential write clock (WCK) where read and write data are referenced to. Being more precise, the GDDR5 SGRAM uses two write clocks, each of them assigned to two bytes. The WCK runs at twice the CK frequency. Taking a GDDR5 with 5 Gbps data rate per pin as an example, the CK clock runs with 1.25 GHz and WCK with 2.5 GHz. The CK and WCK clocks will be aligned during the initialization and training sequence. This alignment allows read and write access with minimum latency.



A single 32-bit GDDR5 chip has about 67 signal pins and the rest are power and grounds in the 170 BGA package.



Qimonda, a spin-off of Infineon, has demonstrated and sampled GDDR5,[1] and released a paper about the technologies behind GDDR5.[2] On May 10, 2008, Qimonda announced volume production of 512 Mib GDDR5 modules rated at 3.6 Gbit/s (900 MHz), 4.0 Gbit/s (1 GHz), and 4.5 Gbit/s (1.125 GHz).[3][dated info]



Hynix Semiconductor has introduced the industry's first 1 Gib GDDR5 memory. It supports a bandwidth of 20 GB/s on a 32-bit bus, which enables memory configurations of 1 GiB at 160 GB/s with only 8 circuits on a 256-bit bus. Hynix 2Gb GDDR5 boasts with 7 GHz clock speed. The newly developed GDDR5 is the fastest and highest density graphics memory available in the market. It operates at 7 GHz effective clock-speed and processes up to 28GB/s with a 32-bit I/O. 2Gb GDDR5 memory chips will enable graphics cards with 2GB or more of onboard memory with 224GB/s or higher peak bandwidth. The memory maker claims that the new chip will be in demand in the second half of 2010.



On June 25, 2008, AMD became the first company to ship products using GDDR5 memory with its Radeon HD 4870 video card series, incorporating Qimonda's 512 Mb memory modules at 3.6 Gbit/s bandwidth.[4][5]
user417
2010-12-07 18:47:42 UTC
These people have the answers you seek

http://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?PHPSESSID=515e305b1c5a80f720c80c384bc0176f&


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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