Will an overclocked GPU mine cryptocurrency faster?

in mining •  7 years ago 

Laptop.jpg
A few days ago while I was playing with the settings on my laptop, I decided to see how overclocking the GPU would affect the hashrate of cryptocurrency mining. From my understanding, a GPU running at a higher clock frequency should be able to perform more calculations per seconds, thus increasing the mining hashrate.

I've previously mined on my desktop workstation which has an AMD Radeon RX 570 GPU. My laptop on the other hand has a Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 graphics card. Up until recently, Nvidia GPUs haven't been widely supported by mining software. The only mining software I've tried yet which can easily utilize Nvidia cards is the MinerGate miner. This is also the most user friendly miner I have ever used. I'm sure someone reading this has experience with other Nvidia friendly miners, so feel free to enlighten me.

Normal clock frequency

Anyways, I did a test run mining Monero at normal clock frequency (1835MHz). This yielded a hashrate of 426H/s from the GPU.
Mining without overclocking.jpg

Turbo

Next, I set the overclock setting to Turbo (lol), This bumped the clock frequency up to 1873MHz.
Overclocking.jpg

Still, even at this higher clocking frequency, the mining hashrate didn't change. It was stuck at 426 H/s.
Mining with overclocking.jpg
The number below the GPU hashrate shows the ten second average GPU hashrate. As you can see on the picture above, the ten second average hashrate appears to have increased from 384 H/s to 416 H/s after overclocking was enabled. However, the average was constantly varying, so it's just a coincident that it was higher with overclocking.

This leaves me wondering: Did overclocking not make the GPU mine faster? Did it mine faster, but the clock went faster as well, so the measurement wrongfully showed the same number? I would love some input, so if you are in the possession of some relevant knowledge or ideas, make sure to share them in the comments section.

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  ·  7 years ago (edited)

This seems to be quite an interesting subject. I wish I had the knowledge on crypto mining to contribute but nevertheless, the least I could do is resteem for more audience.
I think, there should be an equilibrium to be maintained at certain thresholds.
Like a mathematical equation with variants and constants, these things are likely designed to be proportional.

To the question in your title, my Magic 8-Ball says:

As I see it, yes

Hi! I'm a bot, and this answer was posted automatically. Check this post out for more information.

Why would you specify that you are a bot? Then I know that there was no human reasoning behind the comment and then I will struggle to appreciate it. Of course, nothing would change if you didn't specify that you were a bot, but at least I would live happily in a fake reality, believing that someone someone shared my thought;) I'm all for botmaking, but I believe there are more useful ways to utilize bots. Even real world magic 8 balls are pretty useless, so they don't serve well as role models for bots.