Gaming

Vista NVIDIA RTX 4090 FE clocked at 2850 MHz running Cyberpunk 2077 at 170 FPS


Vista NVIDIA RTX 4090 FE clocked at 2850 MHz running Cyberpunk 2077 at 170 FPS



Last Tuesday NVIDIA officially introduced your new series of graphics cards NVIDIA RTX 40 based on the Ada Lovelace architecture. But the GTC 2022 continues and NVIDIA continues to present some news of these new graphics cards. From Wccftech, which has been present these days, they have shared some screenshots where you can see the NVIDIA RTX 4090 clocked much higher than advertised and with lower consumption.

Geeknetic Vista NVIDIA RTX 4090 FE clocked at 2850 MHz running Cyberpunk 2077 at 170 FPS 1
Source Wccftech

These conditions have been seen in a test with Cyberpunk adapted to run the new DLSS 3.0. In the demo of the game some data has been revealed, which includes the 2,850MHz clock speed higher than that announced by NVIDIA. Specifically, they are more than 300 MHz from the 2,520 MHz that reaches with turbo boost. But in addition to this higher clock speed, it has also achieved reduce consumption by up to 100W with temperatures that they are around 50º and with an impressive 170 FPS on average and without overclocking.

Geeknetic Vista NVIDIA RTX 4090 FE clocked at 2850 MHz running Cyberpunk 2077 at 170 FPS 2
Source Wccftech

When DLSS 3.0 is not enabled, FPS drops to 59 and the temperature remains between 50 and 55º, although it has continued to operate at 2.85 GHz. This clock speed gives margin to reach 3.0 GHz as soon as the NVIDIA RTX 4090 is overclocked. The demo was run on an Intel Core i9-12900K with a resolution of 1440p and with the game quality and Raytracing to the maximum.

End of Article. Tell us something in the Comments!

Article Writer: Juan Antonio Soto

Juan Antonio Soto

I am a Computer Engineer and my specialty is automation and robotics. My passion for hardware began at the age of 14 when I gutted my first computer: a 386 DX 40 with 4MB of RAM and a 210MB hard drive. I continue to give free rein to my passion in the technical articles that I write in Geeknetic. I spend most of my free time playing video games, contemporary and retro, on the more than 20 consoles I have, in addition to the PC.

Source link