![]() ![]() All of us have tried everything and so far nothing works. Diablo III already doesn't maximize your card's power even if you set that in the options you still get terrible framerates. I guess the only thing I could do is force the RPM on the fans on the card but I don't want to constantly be using all that electricity when I'm getting nothing out of it. It's that I run in 2560x1600 and have a 780 Ti and it's set to maximum performance. My case is a Coolermaster Haf-X and I've been into computers since 1995. When you set Power Management to "Maximum Performance" it will shoot up to 82c and sometimes higher. If you use GPU-Z and have Power Management Mode set to "Adaptive," your GPU temp will hover probably between 40-70c even while in-game. I'm going to experiment some more but I suspect it has something to do with how the rifts are rendered (light, shadow, contrasts, similar to skyrim enb effects) causing a hard block on how the cards can render. I have fps drops in rifts to about 20fps now. It worked very well for me with Sli gtx 670. Hence game is not optimising it's use of hardware. I would also note that the cpu was not a throttling cause, prior to fix the 4 cores would not over 30% usage despite fps drops to 5, and gpu usage not spiking. After applying these changes both cards will fluctuate in usage according to what is occurring on screen. Imgur Link with Screenshot of Nvidia Inspector ChangesĮdit: I should state, disable antialiasing on the ingame video options, because what we're doing in Nvidia Inspector is applying it externallyĮdit: running msi after burner overlay prior to doing this showed my second card sitting on 50% usage the entire time. It had excellent results, with SLI now activating and GPU usage improving, good frame rates, no significant drop on Rakkis Crossing, still some FPS drops with Firestarter with lots of other affix effects going on, but much less of a slideshow. I hope I was able to help those who were looking for the answer to the same question or was interested in how this works.Last updated at 14:00:17 UTC Weekly Help Desk RAGE Loot Thread Trade ThreadĪfter applying a similar fix to improve Wolfenstein TNO, I attempted the same method on D3. But for now Im sure I can leave power mode on optimal in NVCP and I will create game profiles with power management mode to max performance and it will work. Just on idle it does not work, only after a PC restart. I asked this originally because I wanted to set game profiles in NVCP and I was afraid of the NVCP just can't change onboard the power management mode, but it can. (Note that If I restart PC its 1365 mhz on idle with max performance mode) But when I run a game the GPU core clock immediately goes up to 1365 mhz, and when the game loaded and I start to play the core clock boosts up to around fix 1980 mhz and stays around there even when the GPU usage is only 75-80%. Then I go to NVCP and set the power management to prefer max performance and click apply. The core clock on idle (nothing opened, just MSI afterburner) is 300 mhz. ![]() (Idle = nothing opened, even not a chrome browser)Įxample: So lets say I turn on the computer with optimal performance power management mode in NVCP. That changing NVCP power management mode does not applied to idle without PC restarting. ![]() I did further testing and I realised a thing. The problem is on my side, or people are talking nonsense silly things? And this is true about FPS limiter, vsync. I read a lot of post where people say NVCP settings are applied immediately. For me core clock goes down to 300 mhz and 44 celsius on idle. Now restart PC and check again these values without any change in NVCP.For me it stays on 1365 mhz and 50 celsius like in max performance mode. now without any pc restart check your GPU core clock and temp on idle.Set power management back to optimal or adaptive ( I use optimal ).For me its 1365 mhz and 50 celius on idle. Check your core clock mhz and GPU temp on idle with GPU-Z or MSI Afterburner.Now restart the computer (to let's be sure). ![]()
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