You'll run into a whole lot less of issues, if you are not aware of what you are doing. Revelene님이 먼저 게시:As I always recommend, especially to people that do not understand the settings, just leave it set to "let the 3D application decide". I may be wrong or maybe games need added support for fast to use it well, but once I upgrade it will become very applicable I think. I'm at the point of achieving 60-80fps on most with settings I want and so not really helping me too much. I saw that here recently and have been experiementing, but seems from what others have said and so far I can't prove them wrong that it's more for games that you can run at higher frames(like 120+fps using a 60hz monitor) to begin with. There's also fast sync in Nvidia's vsync settings, which allows a game to have a higher framerate without tearing. fullscreen or borderless in-game may help with this too though depending on game. others like far cry 4 for example adaptive or vsync on much smoother and lag isn't a huge issue when playing an easy game against npc's. Introduces latency lag whatever you want to call it though. 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.Mikel3113님이 먼저 게시:Avoid vsync/triple buffering in-game and in here most of the time, but some games it seems like some combo of fps limiter/adaptive or vsync combined with triple buffering is the only way to get no screen tears and/or stuttering. 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.
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