Man, so there I was, casually scrolling through tech news — yeah, I do that — when this juicy tidbit about GALAX’s RTX 5090 D just jumped out at me. It’s like, who even knew graphics cards could push the limits so much? But here we are, with this beast overclocked to a ridiculous 3650 MHz. Honestly, my brain didn’t compute that for a sec. Anyway, here goes my take.
So, Team OGS, right? They’ve always been these overclocking ninjas, sneaking up and setting crazy records when you’re least expecting. And this time, they’ve cranked the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 D up to mind-blowing speeds. Got me thinking — maybe they’re powered by some secret sauce. Or just too much coffee. Who knows.
Get this: they used some serious kit like the GALAX GeForce RTX 5090 D XOC GPU (yeah, I had to Google half these acronyms), paired with an Intel Core i9-14900KF and a snazzy ASUS ROG Maximus board. Stavros, the brain behind this mission from Team OGS, opened up about their setup — turns out they used an XOC BIOS, maxing out power at a jaw-dropping 2000W. Just imagine the electric bill! And the GPU? It’s got two connectors delivering 600W each. That’s some serious juice right there.
Oh, and the performance? So, this RTX was cranked beyond 3.6 GHz in one benchmark and over 3.5 GHz in others. Their big win was hitting 3650 MHz in the GPUPI benchmark — finished in 39.434 seconds. I don’t even know what GPUPI truly means — maybe some alien language?
Random thought: The memory was clocked to 36 Gbps, and I was like, “Whoa, that’s a 28.5% boost from the stock 28 Gbps.” Yeah, math isn’t my thing, but I checked. This beast of a card can produce up to 2.304 TB/s bandwidth. Numbers are cool, right? Even if I don’t fully get them.
Wrapping my head around this, I gotta give props to these overclocking champs. They’re always pushing GPU limits. Just makes you wonder — when’s the 5090 gonna be the new “meh”? Hopefully not too soon, ’cause I can’t keep up.
Anyway, here’s to Team OGS and their record-smashing brilliance. Makes me wanna open up my old PC and see what I can break—uh, I mean, improve. But maybe I’ll leave that to the pros. For now.