Sorry, but this is straight up wrong. The temperature does increase when you increase the frequencies. My slim for sure does run hotter on 900MHz than on 500 Core.
@Razmann4k Any specific section you want me to test? I quickly booted it up with a fresh save and I do have drops down to like 20/ 22 when driving around the town, so I dont think RSX OC helps mucht on this game.
currently just Crysis 4th Mission. Any suggestions? I've read acsension is a good one too?
Edit: still works absolutely fine.
Did run around, driven with some jeep and did that tank fight. FPS are absolutely horrendous on this ps3 version of crysis, I can tell you this much.
I think I'll YOLO...
I got a 1A 25xx today, min FW 3.5, currently testing 900/1000
75°c still fine :biggrin2: 33% Fanspeed (haven't torn it apart and re-pasted yet but with these temps I am not even sure if this is necessary)
I just tried 900 core once again and I can totally reproduce a crash around 50-53c every time so I am 99% sure it gets unstable due to temperature. Unfortunately absolutey not viable via air cooling
my ears :eek:
Now I really want to get my hands on a 1A 25xx :biggrin2:
Or 4xxx if we get CFW...
I made a quick comparison Stock vs 850/1000 on crysis 4th mission
depending on the situation we're talking about 30%+ fps increase here, absolutely insane.
Ofc its not the norm and more of an exception, still, I do think this is crazy.
Alright thanks guys
@Razmann4k 900 is not possible on mine. Not entirely sure but it seems like I have to maintain temp below 52c to be able to push it that high, which obviously is not possible unless you can live with a jet inside your living room.
I actually teared it apart, cleaned and re-pasted it today. And made pictures which already came in handy.. I have CXD5300CGB 0D Datecode
So I shouldn't try to go higher on VRAM? haha
currently on 850/1000
Nobody can ever tell you that. Not on CPUs, not on GPUs and for sure not on consoles. Like, yea an average value but never ever go straight to X when it comes to overclocking just because someone else with a similar model reached "this" on core and "that" on VRAM, especially when we're talking...