- MODERS HAS SUPERCHARGING AMDS RX 9070 GPU WITH A SIMPLE TRICK
- They have used BIOS for RX 9070 XT with Vanilla GPU
- While this provides a great performance boost that actually makes the RX 9070 about as fast as the XT version, there are huge warnings here
It seems that the AMDS RX 9070 graphics card can be supercharged simply by applying BIOS to its high-tier siblings GPU, RX 9070 XT, based on experiments recently performed.
Videocardz noted that Modders, who live in the PC Games Hardware Forum (a German Tech site), has played around with installing XT BIOS in non-XT models of RX 9070.
Of course, this should not be done in theory. After all, these are two completely different models of graphics cards and BIOS for each is designed specifically for this GPU and must not be used anywhere else.
Doing this would not work at all in many cases – in fact, GPU owners are sometimes completely blocked to use firmware (another term for BIOS) in this way – but because the RX 9070 vanilla card is very similar to the RX 9070 XT (in the form of many specifications) and there are no such restrictions in place, this trick can be pulled off. (Although I still would not recommend doing this for reasons I will come back to).
However, the warning noted what these counterers found with RX 9070 running an RX 9070 XT BIOS was, to say the least, to say.
There were reportedly no problems using XT Bios in this way – at least on the face of it – which essentially use more power and faster watch speeds for the RX 9070, and the graphics card can still be over -clocked on top of this.
As Videocardz notes, the RX 9070 Supercharged was in this way approx. 15% to 20% faster than GPU usually is – with the extra over -bell used, mind. This means that it is close to stock RX 9070 XT performance (without any over -bells) when using BIOS, which is intended for XT (but then 9070 XT could also be over -clocked, of course).
Analysis: Three words – do not
How can the RX 9070 be equal to its XT spin? Well, I have to emphasize again that RX 9070, which comes close to 9070 XT’s performance in this way, not only due to the use of bios from its beef siblings, but also because GPU is overdlocked On top of that.
In short, this is a lot of fudging and pushing the boundaries to flash a non-intent BIOS version into the RX 9070. Even without the extra over-clock, you can see a lack of stability from 9070 GPU trying to cope with using an XT-Bios, and frankly I think this is likely to be likely to depend on how good a chip Use an XT BIOS, and frankly, and frankly, I think it’s likely to be the odds of the odds can depend on how good a chip you’ve got. (There are deviations in the quality of GPUs, which means you get slightly better results in situations where you really push the chip if you’ve been lucky and won the so -called ‘silicon lottery’).
With overblocks as a further measure here that increases XT Bios, I would say that it is very likely that errors are causing. In fact, some of the fashion involved here reported their PC at times, but they were able to finish themselves around these problems. It is certainly the case that those who are at least not very sure of their technical abilities should not try anything similar.
Although things seem to be okay to begin with when using this trick – which is the case for some, apparently – who has to say if a future driver update can throw a wrench in the works? Or whether a future game may have problems with an RX 9070 turbocharged in this way.
Long-term you also run an RX 9070 graphics card consistently well over the current and temperatures-the cooling system was designed for. So especially if it is a board of entry-level without the largest cooler, it can lead to potentially serious problems in the end.
The second point to remember here is that if something goes wrong, either with your first attempt or at a later time, you may end up with a walled GPU. And if you think your warranty will cover the results of a foreign bios that will be flashing to your graphics card, think again – it won’t and you’ll be out of the tune for a whole lot of cash.
Continue a lot on your own danger, considering all this, but it is still interesting to see the results of experiments like this – and how fast the RX 9070 can be when driven up this way.
If you want to try to get more performance out of your RX 9070 graphics card, I would just suggest that you want to overdue it (with the right BIOS to GPU). But even then you need a healthy grasp of technical knowledge to continue, ideally because things can still go wrong with over -bells.