# DGX Spark hitting 83 C under sustained Ollama load — solved by clock-locking via nvidia-smi -lgc

> Source: <https://dev.to/deal_estate_715bf4569d373/dgx-spark-hitting-83degc-under-sustained-ollama-load-solved-by-clock-locking-via-nvidia-smi-lgc-1pn6>
> Published: 2026-07-01 15:38:44+00:00

**TL;DR:** GB10 in the DGX Spark has no user-exposed power-limit or fan-curve control (`nvidia-smi`

returns `[N/A]`

for both — firmware-managed). But `nvidia-smi --lock-gpu-clocks`

DOES work. I wrote a tiny daemon that samples temp every 30s and steps the clock ceiling down 150 MHz whenever it enters the warning band, then relaxes it back up after 3 consecutive cool samples. Ollama gpt-oss:120b + qwen2.5:72b workload — dropped from 83 °C → 72 °C, sustained, same util.

My DGX Spark serving Ollama (~40 GB VRAM across three model instances, sustained 94% util) sits at 82–84 °C indefinitely. No thermal-throttle events yet, but that's uncomfortably close to the SW-slowdown threshold. Standard cooling knobs are absent:

``` bash
$ nvidia-smi --query-gpu=power.limit,power.max_limit,power.min_limit,fan.speed --format=csv,noheader
[N/A], [N/A], [N/A], [N/A]
```

Everything is firmware-managed. `nvidia-smi --help`

still lists `-lgc`

/ `--lock-gpu-clocks`

though, and it works — GB10 accepts arbitrary integer MHz values within silicon range even though `--query-supported-clocks=graphics`

returns `[N/A]`

:

``` bash
$ sudo nvidia-smi -lgc 1500,2000 -i 0
GPU clocks set to "(gpuClkMin 1500, gpuClkMax 2000)" for GPU 0000000F:01:00.0
All done.
```

Three-band hysteresis, one actuator. Pseudocode:

```
every 30s:
  read temp.gpu
  if temp >= 78 C:              step_down(150 MHz), bounded by floor
  elif temp <= 72 C and cool_streak >= 3:  step_up(150 MHz), bounded by ceil
  else:                         hold
  cool_streak = cool_streak+1 if temp <= 72 else 0
```

Setpoints, floor 1800 MHz, ceil 3000 MHz (GB10 max is ~3003). At sustained 83 °C it walks the ceiling down in 150 MHz steps every 30 seconds until temp leaves the hot band, then holds. When load drops it relaxes back to the ceiling on a 3-sample cool streak so a brief dip doesn't clock the whole GPU down for the next hour.

Same Ollama workload throughout, no config changes to the models or the server:

```
time      temp   clock  util   action
07:46:28  82 C   2463   94%    STEP_DOWN
07:47:28  83 C   2463   94%    STEP_DOWN
07:47:58  83 C   2463   94%    STEP_DOWN
07:56:29  76 C   1976   95%    HOLD
07:57:29  77 C   1976   96%    HOLD
08:13:44  72 C   2093   94%    HOLD (cool streak 1)
08:14:14  72 C   2093   94%    HOLD (cool streak 2)
```

−11 °C sustained. No throttle events across the window. Latency impact is real but bounded — the floor cap of 1800 MHz vs stock 2463 MHz ≈ 27% worst-case clock reduction, and in practice the daemon rides much higher than that.

`sudo nvidia-smi -lgc`

needs passwordless sudo for the daemon user. I scope it in `/etc/sudoers.d/`

to only `-lgc *`

and `-rgc`

.Wrote it up as a licensed install at [https://thermal.zctechnologies.org](https://thermal.zctechnologies.org) — Go daemon, systemd unit, sudoers scoped, per-node monthly. Comment or DM if you'd rather just have the shell recipe; the algorithm above is the whole thing and I'm happy to answer questions about setpoints or the ExecStopPost=`nvidia-smi -rgc`

teardown so a graceful stop returns your GPU to stock clocks.
