Installing Our Water Cooler

There's a lot being written about overclocking and undervolting AMD’s Radeon RX Vega 64. Today, we're taking the card's thermals out of the equation to dig deeper into the relationship between clock rate and voltage.

Telemetry at Its Finest

Before we can start, we have to explore how AMD's PowerTune technology operates. It evaluates the GPU’s most important performance characteristics in real-time, while querying the thermal sensors and factoring in the voltage regulator’s telemetry data as well. All of this information is transferred to the pre-programmed Digital Power Management (DPM) arbitrator.

This arbitrator knows the GPU’s power, thermal, and current limits set by the BIOS and the driver, as well as any changes made to the default driver settings. Within these boundaries, the arbitrator controls all voltages, frequencies, and fan speeds in an effort to maximize the graphics card’s performance. If even one of the limits is exceeded, the arbitrator can throttle voltages, clock rates, or both.

Voltages: AMD PowerTune vs. Nvidia GPU Boost

AMD’s Radeon RX Vega 64 also uses Adaptive Voltage and Frequency Scaling (AVFS), which we're already familiar with from its latest APUs and Polaris GPUs. In light of varying wafer quality, this feature is supposed to ensure that every individual die performs at its peak potential. It's similar to Nvidia’s GPU Boost technology. As a result, each GPU has its own individual load line in the voltage settings. However, some things have changed since Polaris’ implementation.

AMD’s WattMan facilitates almost complete freedom to manually set the voltage for the two highest DPM states. This is different from GPU Boost, which only allows a type of offset to be defined for manual voltage changes, and full voltage control can’t be forced via the curve editor. As we see later, the added freedom can be a blessing or a curse, because manually-set voltages for the DPM states can counteract, or even completely cancel, AVFS.

Our monitoring allowed us to directly measure how the card’s voltages behave using a manual setting with and without a power limit. The results are surprising; they're very different from what you see on a Polaris-based card.

We’d also like to do a little myth-busting. All of the clock rate gains we achieved via undervolting were due to temperature decreases on air-cooled cards. Eliminating temperature from the equation like we’re doing in this test turns everything on its head. Sensationalist headlines become urban legends in the process.

What We Tested

In order to make the results easier to understand and compare, we settled on five different settings. These are completely sufficient to demonstrate the respective extremes:

Stock Settings "Balanced Mode"

Undervolted: Voltage Set to 1.0V using Default Power Limit

Overclocked: Increased Power Limit by +50%

Overclocked: Increased Power Limit by +50%, Increased GPU Clock Frequency by 3%

Overclocked: Increased Power Limit by +50%, Increased GPU Clock Frequency by 3%; Voltage Set to 1.0V

Undervolting the two adjustable DPM states to below 1.0V resulted in instability across many different scenarios. It was mostly possible to achieve 0.95V, but the clock rate fell disproportionately in response. Lowering the voltage to under 1.0V while using the maximum power limit resulted in a crash as soon as a 3D application was started.

Building A Big Cooling Solution

First things first: we need to build a thermal solution able to provide the same temperatures at 400W that it provides at stock settings. In the end, the only way to achieve this is by using a closed loop and a compressor cooler. This setup can guarantee a constant 20°C for the GPU’s cold plate.

In addition to Alphacool's Eiszeit 2000 Chiller, we're using the EK-FC Radeon Vega by EK Water Blocks. It’s made of nickel-plated copper, and makes contact with the GPU, HBM2, the voltage regulation circuitry, and the chokes. All told, the setup does exactly what we need it to.

In order to avoid the somewhat ridiculous aesthetic of a single-slot water cooler on a dual-slot graphics card, we switched the original bracket out for a bundled single-slot one. Countersunk screws sit on top of the slot cover (rather than in it) due to its holes, but this is a relatively small blemish.

After cleaning the old thermal paste off of AMD's interposer, a thin layer of fresh stuff is applied to the surface with a small spatula. A little leftover residue on the die might not look great. But too much pressure during the clean-up process could permanently damage the package, so you have to be careful.

Next, the thermal pads are applied to their target areas on the water block. EK's instructions would have us put them on the graphics card instead. The reason why we do this differently, however, is that we prefer to put the board on the cooler (which is lying on the table), rather than the other way around. With the thermal pads on the water block, they don’t fall off in the process.

Once the graphics card is screwed into place, it’s ready for action. The installation process is quick and easy. Just be mindful of the interposer.

The exposed back side shows the many screws and their nylon washers used to secure the water block. Around the package alone, seven screws hold everything tightly together.

Enthusiasts looking for a bit of aesthetic flair and slightly better thermal performance (cool those phase doublers off!) can attach the fitted backplate.

We removed the backplate for our measurements because we just couldn’t bring ourselves to drill holes through it.

Test System and Methodology

We introduced our new test system and methodology in How We Test Graphics Cards. If you'd like more detail about our general approach, check that piece out. Note that we've upgraded our CPU and cooling solution since then in order to avoid any potential bottlenecks when benchmarking fast graphics cards.

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The hardware used in our lab includes:

Test Equipment and Environment System - Intel Core i7-6900K @ 4.3 GHz- MSI X99S Xpower Gaming Titanium- Corsair Vengeance DDR4-3200- 1x 1TB Toshiba OCZ RD400 (M.2 SSD, System)- 2x 960GB Toshiba OCZ TR150 (Storage, Images)- be quiet Dark Power Pro 11, 850W PSU Cooling - EK Water Blocks EK-FC Radeon Vega- Alphacool Eiszeit 2000 Chiller- Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut (Used when switching coolers) Ambient Temperature - 22°C (Air Conditioner) PC Case - Lian Li PC-T70 with Extension Kit and Mods Monitor - Eizo EV3237-BK Power Consumption Measurement - Contact-free DC Measurement at PCIe Slot (Using a Riser Card) - Contact-free DC Measurement at External Auxiliary Power Supply Cable - Direct Voltage Measurement at Power Supply - 2 x Rohde & Schwarz HMO 3054, 500MHz Digital Multi-Channel Oscilloscope with Storage Function - 4 x Rohde & Schwarz HZO50 Current Probe (1mA - 30A, 100kHz, DC) - 4 x Rohde & Schwarz HZ355 (10:1 Probes, 500MHz) - 1 x Rohde & Schwarz HMC 8012 Digital Multimeter with Storage Function Thermal Measurement - 1 x Optris PI640 80 Hz Infrared Camera + PI Connect - Real-Time Infrared Monitoring and Recording



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