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AMD 290 Underclocking Issue, reverts to 300MHz clock speed

Posted: Fri May 22, 2020 3:18 pm
by turtlelordjp
I am underclocking my AMD 290, as running it at the stock clock speed was causing errors (1010 -> 910). This fixed the errors, but I have run into another problem. Sometimes the card will refuse to move past the lowest clock on the scale (in this case 300MHz) without me turning off and on the custom tuning parameters. Once I toggle them off and on it will happily chug away at the new highest clock for a while, but eventually will fall back into being stuck at the lowest clock-rate. Any ideas as to how to fix this, or is there a better way to increase GPU stability? Thanks!

Details:
AMD Driver: (20.4.2, but it was also happening on 20.2.2)
OS: Windows 10 Pro
F@H version: 7.6.13

Re: AMD 290 Underclocking Issue, reverts to 300MHz clock spe

Posted: Fri May 22, 2020 3:27 pm
by bruce
This, indeed, is a strange issue but since FAH's policy is that we don't support over-/under-clocking we can't give you an official answer. I'll leave the topic here in case somebody wants to offer a personal opinion. (Personally, I don't know.)

Re: AMD 290 Underclocking Issue, reverts to 300MHz clock spe

Posted: Fri May 22, 2020 3:30 pm
by turtlelordjp
I guess another question is there anything else to try? I think my card is factory overclocked, so I am having issues without modification

Re: AMD 290 Underclocking Issue, reverts to 300MHz clock spe

Posted: Fri May 22, 2020 7:50 pm
by PantherX
Welcome to the F@H Forum turtlelordjp,

Once of the reasons that I have come across for the GPU frequencies to be operating at the lowest state is a driver reset. This can be caused by unstable frequencies, voltage or excessive heat. This applies to factory overclocked GPUs too since some of them are stable enough for games but not for folding. Try using AMD stock values.

Re: AMD 290 Underclocking Issue, reverts to 300MHz clock spe

Posted: Fri May 22, 2020 9:30 pm
by MeeLee
Did you check the temperature of the GPU?
I would remove the heatsink and fans, reapply thermal paste, and use thermal padding on the memory modules, clean any dirt from the heat sink by blowing some compressed air in the cooling housing (without spinning the fan, or you can fry the GPU).
Reassemble, and try running stock speeds.

If that doesn't do the trick, perhaps some caps need replacement on the GPU.Aside from the fan, they're usually the only thing that goes bad on GPUs (when handled with care).