Hello everyone.
I am going to open a gaming center soon.
I am planning to include a racing section.
I am looking for games that are both playable in 3D vision and support G-27 wheels.
I also hope to know what is the cheapest graphic card that supports 3D vision and how much does it cost.
Do i need a monitor that supports 3D?
if so, what are the recommended monitors within a reasonable price range because i am planning to start with 15 stations.
I appreciate your feedback.
Thanks.
Hello everyone.
I am going to open a gaming center soon.
I am planning to include a racing section.
I am looking for games that are both playable in 3D vision and support G-27 wheels.
I also hope to know what is the cheapest graphic card that supports 3D vision and how much does it cost.
Do i need a monitor that supports 3D?
if so, what are the recommended monitors within a reasonable price range because i am planning to start with 15 stations.
Hardware-wise, you're going to want at least SLI 770s for most new games. You might get away with less than that for older titles, but you can't cheap out on it too much.
As for the monitor, yes. You will need a monitor that supports 3d vision. Be certain it is a 3d vision monitor. There are other, cheaper monitors that claim to support 3d, but don't specify 3d vision. These will not work.
Hardware-wise, you're going to want at least SLI 770s for most new games. You might get away with less than that for older titles, but you can't cheap out on it too much.
As for the monitor, yes. You will need a monitor that supports 3d vision. Be certain it is a 3d vision monitor. There are other, cheaper monitors that claim to support 3d, but don't specify 3d vision. These will not work.
For this type of application, I think you would probably be well suited by the VG248QE monitors. Less hassle, known to work well in 3D, about as cheap as you can get a viable 3D Vision setup.
[url]http://www.amazon.com/VG248QE-24-Inch-Screen-LED-lit-Monitor/dp/B00B2HH7G0[/url]
Not for all of your play stations, but you might consider doing a couple of premium stations that include 3 of those monitors for a 3D Vision Surround. This is considered to be one of the best racing sim type setups. Those would require beefy GPUs though, probably SLI GTX 780 or better.
For your regular stations I agree with Pirate that you should target at least $500 GPU for each station. SLI 770, or SLI 760 should be good. Single 780 is probably OK too, although SLI 760 will beat it in performance for the price.
You also need high power CPU to drive games well, depending upon game.
What is your target driving game? (Maybe other people can suggest their favorite racing game.)
I did see Grid:Autosport just updated to true, supported 3D Vision. [url]https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic/733840/3d-vision/grid-autosport-announced-has-3d-vision-support/[/url]
For this type of application, I think you would probably be well suited by the VG248QE monitors. Less hassle, known to work well in 3D, about as cheap as you can get a viable 3D Vision setup.
Not for all of your play stations, but you might consider doing a couple of premium stations that include 3 of those monitors for a 3D Vision Surround. This is considered to be one of the best racing sim type setups. Those would require beefy GPUs though, probably SLI GTX 780 or better.
For your regular stations I agree with Pirate that you should target at least $500 GPU for each station. SLI 770, or SLI 760 should be good. Single 780 is probably OK too, although SLI 760 will beat it in performance for the price.
You also need high power CPU to drive games well, depending upon game.
What is your target driving game? (Maybe other people can suggest their favorite racing game.)
The grid games are good in 3d vision and surround. I have been going through them recently. More of an arcade style gameplay but works perfectly with G27 wheel and an Obutto cockpit :) (with a few tweaks
The grid games are good in 3d vision and surround. I have been going through them recently. More of an arcade style gameplay but works perfectly with G27 wheel and an Obutto cockpit :) (with a few tweaks
i7-4790K CPU 4.8Ghz stable overclock.
16 GB RAM Corsair
EVGA 1080TI SLI
Samsung SSD 840Pro
ASUS Z97-WS
3D Surround ASUS Rog Swift PG278Q(R), 2x PG278Q (yes it works)
Obutto R3volution.
Windows 10 pro 64x (Windows 7 Dual boot)
[quote="Pirateguybrush"]Hardware-wise, you're going to want at least SLI 770s for most new games. You might get away with less than that for older titles, but you can't cheap out on it too much.
As for the monitor, yes. You will need a monitor that supports 3d vision. Be certain it is a 3d vision monitor. There are other, cheaper monitors that claim to support 3d, but don't specify 3d vision. These will not work.[/quote]
How many GBs are enough for the new games, i am not updated on that subject, would u please enlighten me :) ?
if possible maybe a link to a card strong enough?
what about the old titles, what card is powerful enough?
just to make sure, what is the price range of the glasses and are there any better than others?
would it cause my costumers a headache?
[quote="bo3b"]For this type of application, I think you would probably be well suited by the VG248QE monitors. Less hassle, known to work well in 3D, about as cheap as you can get a viable 3D Vision setup.
[url]http://www.amazon.com/VG248QE-24-Inch-Screen-LED-lit-Monitor/dp/B00B2HH7G0[/url]
Not for all of your play stations, but you might consider doing a couple of premium stations that include 3 of those monitors for a 3D Vision Surround. This is considered to be one of the best racing sim type setups. Those would require beefy GPUs though, probably SLI GTX 780 or better.
For your regular stations I agree with Pirate that you should target at least $500 GPU for each station. SLI 770, or SLI 760 should be good. Single 780 is probably OK too, although SLI 760 will beat it in performance for the price.
You also need high power CPU to drive games well, depending upon game.
What is your target driving game? (Maybe other people can suggest their favorite racing game.)
I did see Grid:Autosport just updated to true, supported 3D Vision. [url]https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic/733840/3d-vision/grid-autosport-announced-has-3d-vision-support/[/url][/quote]
Monitor's looking good, seems to have a good price too...
Sounds good, how many GBs should the card be? Would i get away with 2GB?
Ok when you say regular, do you mean 3D supporting but not as good? or do you mean that it would not support 3D?
EDIT: i also want to inquire about the processor power you have in mind, Thanks :)
[quote="djb"]I still play Need for Speed: Shift, and Dirt 3 with the G27 in Surround.[/quote]
How well do they work for you? could you provide me with your setup please :)?
[quote="necropants"]The grid games are good in 3d vision and surround. I have been going through them recently. More of an arcade style gameplay but works perfectly with G27 wheel and an Obutto cockpit :) (with a few tweaks[/quote]
Sounds pretty cool, could you provide me with more information about your setup?
Thanks everyone i really appreciate your input, this means a lot to me :)
EDIT: One more thing guys, you guys seem pretty experienced with the topic, i want to inquire about the non-3D station while we're at it, i am still looking for a setup. Any suggestions?
EDIT2: also, i'm looking for a 47" or 50" monitor for both 3D and non-3D stations, any suggestion, ik i wanted an affordable setup but i'm willing to pay for the monitor. Appreciate ur help.
Pirateguybrush said:Hardware-wise, you're going to want at least SLI 770s for most new games. You might get away with less than that for older titles, but you can't cheap out on it too much.
As for the monitor, yes. You will need a monitor that supports 3d vision. Be certain it is a 3d vision monitor. There are other, cheaper monitors that claim to support 3d, but don't specify 3d vision. These will not work.
How many GBs are enough for the new games, i am not updated on that subject, would u please enlighten me :) ?
if possible maybe a link to a card strong enough?
what about the old titles, what card is powerful enough?
just to make sure, what is the price range of the glasses and are there any better than others?
would it cause my costumers a headache?
bo3b said:For this type of application, I think you would probably be well suited by the VG248QE monitors. Less hassle, known to work well in 3D, about as cheap as you can get a viable 3D Vision setup.
Not for all of your play stations, but you might consider doing a couple of premium stations that include 3 of those monitors for a 3D Vision Surround. This is considered to be one of the best racing sim type setups. Those would require beefy GPUs though, probably SLI GTX 780 or better.
For your regular stations I agree with Pirate that you should target at least $500 GPU for each station. SLI 770, or SLI 760 should be good. Single 780 is probably OK too, although SLI 760 will beat it in performance for the price.
You also need high power CPU to drive games well, depending upon game.
What is your target driving game? (Maybe other people can suggest their favorite racing game.)
Monitor's looking good, seems to have a good price too...
Sounds good, how many GBs should the card be? Would i get away with 2GB?
Ok when you say regular, do you mean 3D supporting but not as good? or do you mean that it would not support 3D?
EDIT: i also want to inquire about the processor power you have in mind, Thanks :)
djb said:I still play Need for Speed: Shift, and Dirt 3 with the G27 in Surround.
How well do they work for you? could you provide me with your setup please :)?
necropants said:The grid games are good in 3d vision and surround. I have been going through them recently. More of an arcade style gameplay but works perfectly with G27 wheel and an Obutto cockpit :) (with a few tweaks
Sounds pretty cool, could you provide me with more information about your setup?
Thanks everyone i really appreciate your input, this means a lot to me :)
EDIT: One more thing guys, you guys seem pretty experienced with the topic, i want to inquire about the non-3D station while we're at it, i am still looking for a setup. Any suggestions?
EDIT2: also, i'm looking for a 47" or 50" monitor for both 3D and non-3D stations, any suggestion, ik i wanted an affordable setup but i'm willing to pay for the monitor. Appreciate ur help.
I believe the largest 3d monitor you can get is 27". Anything larger and you're looking at a TV, which will be limited to 720p in 3d. You can run 1080p 3d, but only at 24hz (which is unplayable for games).
For newer games, you'll want 3gb+ [b]on each card[/b]. For current/older games, 2gb (per card) should be ok. SLI is basically a requirement.
As for glasses, nVidia 3d vision glasses are the only glasses that will work with 3d vision monitors. If using a TV, you need to use the glasses that came with the TV. As for headaches, some people do get them after a while. Though I think most people find after they've used it a few times the headaches stop.
I believe the largest 3d monitor you can get is 27". Anything larger and you're looking at a TV, which will be limited to 720p in 3d. You can run 1080p 3d, but only at 24hz (which is unplayable for games).
For newer games, you'll want 3gb+ on each card. For current/older games, 2gb (per card) should be ok. SLI is basically a requirement.
As for glasses, nVidia 3d vision glasses are the only glasses that will work with 3d vision monitors. If using a TV, you need to use the glasses that came with the TV. As for headaches, some people do get them after a while. Though I think most people find after they've used it a few times the headaches stop.
[quote="Pirateguybrush"]I believe the largest 3d monitor you can get is 27". Anything larger and you're looking at a TV, which will be limited to 720p in 3d. You can run 1080p 3d, but only at 24hz (which is unplayable for games).
For newer games, you'll want 3gb+ [b]on each card[/b]. For current/older games, 2gb (per card) should be ok. SLI is basically a requirement.
As for glasses, nVidia 3d vision glasses are the only glasses that will work with 3d vision monitors. If using a TV, you need to use the glasses that came with the TV. As for headaches, some people do get them after a while. Though I think most people find after they've used it a few times the headaches stop.[/quote]
I believe that 27" is way too small for the experience i'm looking to provide.
Is 720p not playable ? can you recommend a TV that is at least 47" and fits the purpose please?
Thanks
Pirateguybrush said:I believe the largest 3d monitor you can get is 27". Anything larger and you're looking at a TV, which will be limited to 720p in 3d. You can run 1080p 3d, but only at 24hz (which is unplayable for games).
For newer games, you'll want 3gb+ on each card. For current/older games, 2gb (per card) should be ok. SLI is basically a requirement.
As for glasses, nVidia 3d vision glasses are the only glasses that will work with 3d vision monitors. If using a TV, you need to use the glasses that came with the TV. As for headaches, some people do get them after a while. Though I think most people find after they've used it a few times the headaches stop.
I believe that 27" is way too small for the experience i'm looking to provide.
Is 720p not playable ? can you recommend a TV that is at least 47" and fits the purpose please?
A member recently built a curved screen for surround projection, problem is that a light controlled environment is needed.
https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic/757740/nvidia-surround/new-curved-screen/
All large monitors are only available in professional versions and are extremely pricey.
Some of Samsungs higher end 3D HDTVs support checkerboard at 1920x1080i. The image is supposedly, close to rivaling a true 1920x1080P monitor. 3DTV Play is required and you'd use the display manufacturers glasses. Be careful though, because certain models may have slow response times.
The problem is that 720P on a 1080P does not look real good on most TVs. Also, when gaming, you want to turn off all of the post processing that is done on the display or else you'll get increased lag. So any processing that would make the image look good is turned off and needs to remain off.
All large monitors are only available in professional versions and are extremely pricey.
Some of Samsungs higher end 3D HDTVs support checkerboard at 1920x1080i. The image is supposedly, close to rivaling a true 1920x1080P monitor. 3DTV Play is required and you'd use the display manufacturers glasses. Be careful though, because certain models may have slow response times.
The problem is that 720P on a 1080P does not look real good on most TVs. Also, when gaming, you want to turn off all of the post processing that is done on the display or else you'll get increased lag. So any processing that would make the image look good is turned off and needs to remain off.
That's why I suggest that you might have two tiers of game play, one normal playstation with a single monitor, and a higher end one with 3 screens in 3D Surround.
[img]http://3dvision-blog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/3d-vision-surround-setup.jpg[/img]
For 27" monitor, it partly depends upon how close the screen is, how much of your field of view is seen.
But if you think that won't work, you can always go with 3D Projectors on a big screen or wall.
The other advantage of 3D projectors is they run at 720p, which sounds bad, but in practice is actually quite nice in 3D. The advantage is that you can get much better performance, or cheaper cost, because of the smaller number of pixels.
For GPU VRAM requirements, I don't think any of the current suggestions for racing games needs anything more than 2G. Future games might, but I personally wouldn't spend the extra money until it's actually necessary.
For system RAM requirements, you can easily get by with 4G on each machine, as long as you run an x64 OS. People will argue for 8G, but I only know of two (non-racing) games today that use more than 4G of RAM.
For CPU, you will want something decent, and an i5 Haswell chip is probably the right call here. Not super expensive, pretty much best performance you can get today. 8 threads does nothing for most games. 4 threads is the sweet spot.
That's all based on Value recommendations, not necessarily best performance, or cheapest price. You could cut corners in different ways and still get acceptable performance, but it depends upon the experience you want to present.
That's why I suggest that you might have two tiers of game play, one normal playstation with a single monitor, and a higher end one with 3 screens in 3D Surround.
For 27" monitor, it partly depends upon how close the screen is, how much of your field of view is seen.
But if you think that won't work, you can always go with 3D Projectors on a big screen or wall.
The other advantage of 3D projectors is they run at 720p, which sounds bad, but in practice is actually quite nice in 3D. The advantage is that you can get much better performance, or cheaper cost, because of the smaller number of pixels.
For GPU VRAM requirements, I don't think any of the current suggestions for racing games needs anything more than 2G. Future games might, but I personally wouldn't spend the extra money until it's actually necessary.
For system RAM requirements, you can easily get by with 4G on each machine, as long as you run an x64 OS. People will argue for 8G, but I only know of two (non-racing) games today that use more than 4G of RAM.
For CPU, you will want something decent, and an i5 Haswell chip is probably the right call here. Not super expensive, pretty much best performance you can get today. 8 threads does nothing for most games. 4 threads is the sweet spot.
That's all based on Value recommendations, not necessarily best performance, or cheapest price. You could cut corners in different ways and still get acceptable performance, but it depends upon the experience you want to present.
Acer H5360 (1280x720@120Hz) - ASUS VG248QE with GSync mod - 3D Vision 1&2 - Driver 372.54
GTX 970 - i5-4670K@4.2GHz - 12GB RAM - Win7x64+evilKB2670838 - 4 Disk X25 RAID
SAGER NP9870-S - GTX 980 - i7-6700K - Win10 Pro 1607 Latest 3Dmigoto Release Bo3b's School for ShaderHackers
djb said:
I still play Need for Speed: Shift, and Dirt 3 with the G27 in Surround.
How well do they work for you? could you provide me with your setup please :)?
==
Rampage IV Extreme/bios 4503/3960K-4.4Ghz/Win7 64/Pro
16GB G.Skill F3-14900CL9D-8GBSR
3 X EVGA GTX 680/4GB, 04G-P4-2686-KR
3 X ASUS VG Series VG278H - Surround 3D
1 X EVGA GT 610 2 GB, 02G-P3-2617-KR
1 X Planar SA2311W
Intel 520 Series SSD 240 GB, 2 X 480 GB
SilverStone ST1500W PSU
Pump – Swiftech mcp35x2
XSPC RayStorm High CPU Liquid Cooling Block
XSPC X79 Rampage IV Motherboard Water Block Set
EVGA Precision X
Voltage 987mv to 1150mv
Power Target 130%
GPU Clock Offset +140mhz
Mem Clock Offset +350mhz
whql 337.88
Need for Speed Shift, Runs great 98% of the time, you have to spend some time finding the right settings on the quality of graphics. I have it set on the higher end, thus get my 2% of crashes. I could dial down the quality a bit, but live with it. I do overclock for this game.
Dirt 3, I don't overclock, and have at max settings and it never crashes. Convergence high with camera behind the car is great.
djb said:
I still play Need for Speed: Shift, and Dirt 3 with the G27 in Surround.
How well do they work for you? could you provide me with your setup please :)?
==
Rampage IV Extreme/bios 4503/3960K-4.4Ghz/Win7 64/Pro
16GB G.Skill F3-14900CL9D-8GBSR
3 X EVGA GTX 680/4GB, 04G-P4-2686-KR
3 X ASUS VG Series VG278H - Surround 3D
1 X EVGA GT 610 2 GB, 02G-P3-2617-KR
1 X Planar SA2311W
Intel 520 Series SSD 240 GB, 2 X 480 GB
SilverStone ST1500W PSU
Pump – Swiftech mcp35x2
XSPC RayStorm High CPU Liquid Cooling Block
XSPC X79 Rampage IV Motherboard Water Block Set
EVGA Precision X
Voltage 987mv to 1150mv
Power Target 130%
GPU Clock Offset +140mhz
Mem Clock Offset +350mhz
whql 337.88
Need for Speed Shift, Runs great 98% of the time, you have to spend some time finding the right settings on the quality of graphics. I have it set on the higher end, thus get my 2% of crashes. I could dial down the quality a bit, but live with it. I do overclock for this game.
Dirt 3, I don't overclock, and have at max settings and it never crashes. Convergence high with camera behind the car is great.
I am going to open a gaming center soon.
I am planning to include a racing section.
I am looking for games that are both playable in 3D vision and support G-27 wheels.
I also hope to know what is the cheapest graphic card that supports 3D vision and how much does it cost.
Do i need a monitor that supports 3D?
if so, what are the recommended monitors within a reasonable price range because i am planning to start with 15 stations.
I appreciate your feedback.
Thanks.
As for the monitor, yes. You will need a monitor that supports 3d vision. Be certain it is a 3d vision monitor. There are other, cheaper monitors that claim to support 3d, but don't specify 3d vision. These will not work.
http://www.amazon.com/VG248QE-24-Inch-Screen-LED-lit-Monitor/dp/B00B2HH7G0
Not for all of your play stations, but you might consider doing a couple of premium stations that include 3 of those monitors for a 3D Vision Surround. This is considered to be one of the best racing sim type setups. Those would require beefy GPUs though, probably SLI GTX 780 or better.
For your regular stations I agree with Pirate that you should target at least $500 GPU for each station. SLI 770, or SLI 760 should be good. Single 780 is probably OK too, although SLI 760 will beat it in performance for the price.
You also need high power CPU to drive games well, depending upon game.
What is your target driving game? (Maybe other people can suggest their favorite racing game.)
I did see Grid:Autosport just updated to true, supported 3D Vision. https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic/733840/3d-vision/grid-autosport-announced-has-3d-vision-support/
Acer H5360 (1280x720@120Hz) - ASUS VG248QE with GSync mod - 3D Vision 1&2 - Driver 372.54
GTX 970 - i5-4670K@4.2GHz - 12GB RAM - Win7x64+evilKB2670838 - 4 Disk X25 RAID
SAGER NP9870-S - GTX 980 - i7-6700K - Win10 Pro 1607
Latest 3Dmigoto Release
Bo3b's School for ShaderHackers
i7-4790K CPU 4.8Ghz stable overclock.
16 GB RAM Corsair
EVGA 1080TI SLI
Samsung SSD 840Pro
ASUS Z97-WS
3D Surround ASUS Rog Swift PG278Q(R), 2x PG278Q (yes it works)
Obutto R3volution.
Windows 10 pro 64x (Windows 7 Dual boot)
How many GBs are enough for the new games, i am not updated on that subject, would u please enlighten me :) ?
if possible maybe a link to a card strong enough?
what about the old titles, what card is powerful enough?
just to make sure, what is the price range of the glasses and are there any better than others?
would it cause my costumers a headache?
Monitor's looking good, seems to have a good price too...
Sounds good, how many GBs should the card be? Would i get away with 2GB?
Ok when you say regular, do you mean 3D supporting but not as good? or do you mean that it would not support 3D?
EDIT: i also want to inquire about the processor power you have in mind, Thanks :)
How well do they work for you? could you provide me with your setup please :)?
Sounds pretty cool, could you provide me with more information about your setup?
Thanks everyone i really appreciate your input, this means a lot to me :)
EDIT: One more thing guys, you guys seem pretty experienced with the topic, i want to inquire about the non-3D station while we're at it, i am still looking for a setup. Any suggestions?
EDIT2: also, i'm looking for a 47" or 50" monitor for both 3D and non-3D stations, any suggestion, ik i wanted an affordable setup but i'm willing to pay for the monitor. Appreciate ur help.
For newer games, you'll want 3gb+ on each card. For current/older games, 2gb (per card) should be ok. SLI is basically a requirement.
As for glasses, nVidia 3d vision glasses are the only glasses that will work with 3d vision monitors. If using a TV, you need to use the glasses that came with the TV. As for headaches, some people do get them after a while. Though I think most people find after they've used it a few times the headaches stop.
I believe that 27" is way too small for the experience i'm looking to provide.
Is 720p not playable ? can you recommend a TV that is at least 47" and fits the purpose please?
Thanks
https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic/757740/nvidia-surround/new-curved-screen/
All large monitors are only available in professional versions and are extremely pricey.
Some of Samsungs higher end 3D HDTVs support checkerboard at 1920x1080i. The image is supposedly, close to rivaling a true 1920x1080P monitor. 3DTV Play is required and you'd use the display manufacturers glasses. Be careful though, because certain models may have slow response times.
The problem is that 720P on a 1080P does not look real good on most TVs. Also, when gaming, you want to turn off all of the post processing that is done on the display or else you'll get increased lag. So any processing that would make the image look good is turned off and needs to remain off.
For 27" monitor, it partly depends upon how close the screen is, how much of your field of view is seen.
But if you think that won't work, you can always go with 3D Projectors on a big screen or wall.
The other advantage of 3D projectors is they run at 720p, which sounds bad, but in practice is actually quite nice in 3D. The advantage is that you can get much better performance, or cheaper cost, because of the smaller number of pixels.
For GPU VRAM requirements, I don't think any of the current suggestions for racing games needs anything more than 2G. Future games might, but I personally wouldn't spend the extra money until it's actually necessary.
For system RAM requirements, you can easily get by with 4G on each machine, as long as you run an x64 OS. People will argue for 8G, but I only know of two (non-racing) games today that use more than 4G of RAM.
For CPU, you will want something decent, and an i5 Haswell chip is probably the right call here. Not super expensive, pretty much best performance you can get today. 8 threads does nothing for most games. 4 threads is the sweet spot.
That's all based on Value recommendations, not necessarily best performance, or cheapest price. You could cut corners in different ways and still get acceptable performance, but it depends upon the experience you want to present.
Acer H5360 (1280x720@120Hz) - ASUS VG248QE with GSync mod - 3D Vision 1&2 - Driver 372.54
GTX 970 - i5-4670K@4.2GHz - 12GB RAM - Win7x64+evilKB2670838 - 4 Disk X25 RAID
SAGER NP9870-S - GTX 980 - i7-6700K - Win10 Pro 1607
Latest 3Dmigoto Release
Bo3b's School for ShaderHackers
I still play Need for Speed: Shift, and Dirt 3 with the G27 in Surround.
How well do they work for you? could you provide me with your setup please :)?
==
Rampage IV Extreme/bios 4503/3960K-4.4Ghz/Win7 64/Pro
16GB G.Skill F3-14900CL9D-8GBSR
3 X EVGA GTX 680/4GB, 04G-P4-2686-KR
3 X ASUS VG Series VG278H - Surround 3D
1 X EVGA GT 610 2 GB, 02G-P3-2617-KR
1 X Planar SA2311W
Intel 520 Series SSD 240 GB, 2 X 480 GB
SilverStone ST1500W PSU
Pump – Swiftech mcp35x2
XSPC RayStorm High CPU Liquid Cooling Block
XSPC X79 Rampage IV Motherboard Water Block Set
EVGA Precision X
Voltage 987mv to 1150mv
Power Target 130%
GPU Clock Offset +140mhz
Mem Clock Offset +350mhz
whql 337.88
Need for Speed Shift, Runs great 98% of the time, you have to spend some time finding the right settings on the quality of graphics. I have it set on the higher end, thus get my 2% of crashes. I could dial down the quality a bit, but live with it. I do overclock for this game.
Dirt 3, I don't overclock, and have at max settings and it never crashes. Convergence high with camera behind the car is great.