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Damn you [USER=75]@Runamok81[/USER] ! Before your posts I was happy with choosing the 3060Ti over the A4000. Now I want one too I wouldn't tinker with the VBios. Nvidia has historically been really restrictive with such mods on their workstation cards and I suspect it got even more complicated in the wake of the mining boom. The risk to permanently brick the card (especially as it doesn't have Dual Bios) is really high.I'd start with Afterburner. Push your clockspeeds and see how much you can get out of it with the given voltage limits. After that I'd try to get the voltage control unlocked. If it works with the Afterburner Beta, you should be able to get a significant boost by adjusting your voltage curve until you hit the power limit.If you still want to go further after that, your safest bet might be a shunt mod. However, you should be aware that you will run your PCIe Connector out of spec. It should be fine (depending on your PSU), but it can cause issues. I wouldn't get my hopes up concerning the second power connector on the board. I doubt they're properly connected to the VRMs on the board.
Damn you [USER=75]@Runamok81[/USER] ! Before your posts I was happy with choosing the 3060Ti over the A4000. Now I want one too
I wouldn't tinker with the VBios. Nvidia has historically been really restrictive with such mods on their workstation cards and I suspect it got even more complicated in the wake of the mining boom. The risk to permanently brick the card (especially as it doesn't have Dual Bios) is really high.
I'd start with Afterburner. Push your clockspeeds and see how much you can get out of it with the given voltage limits. After that I'd try to get the voltage control unlocked. If it works with the Afterburner Beta, you should be able to get a significant boost by adjusting your voltage curve until you hit the power limit.
If you still want to go further after that, your safest bet might be a shunt mod. However, you should be aware that you will run your PCIe Connector out of spec. It should be fine (depending on your PSU), but it can cause issues. I wouldn't get my hopes up concerning the second power connector on the board. I doubt they're properly connected to the VRMs on the board.