Doesn't change the voltage at all (the screenshots are different because of fluctuation). And I am worried that it is sacrificing power and bottlenecking my CPU even more than it already is. Unfortunately, I have upgraded since, and built an entirely new computer with a Ryzen 3 3200G and while I have the idea of overclocking that down (more voltage and higher level load line calibration = more OC headroom usually), it doesn't seem to apply to my GPU because as I stated in the title, the voltage slider doesn't do ANYTHING. This was the first time I had ever overclocked any of my computer components because I had originally used it in a prebuilt HP Z200 SFF Workstation that I got for free (which didn't actually fit in the case because my specific model wasn't the low-profile version so r.i.p.) so Afterburner's "OC Scanner" was a big boon and it fit really well with the specs of that computer back in the day, the first generation core i5's. And to siphon every inch of performance I could out of this baby, I resorted to MSI Afterburner after seeing it be used in several LTT videos before. I know that it is very bad for gaming, around the 750 Ti in terms of performance, but I have a very very strict budget and it's all I could afford since. I have a Gigabyte OC Nvidia GT 1030 and have been using it for about 2 1/2 years now.
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