2700x won't meet the 4.15ghz requirement. Is it a coincidence or something else?
2700x won't meet the 4.15ghz requirement. Is it a coincidence or something else?
Am I just unlucky for getting a bad card?
I can't reach 4.15ghz in Cinebench, only freezes and crashes (best I managed was 4.1)
My idle temps are extremely high (50*c) and the voltage is also high (1.4v), tried to lower it but the machine freezes afterward
MOBO : MSI x470 Gaming Plus
CPU : Ryzen 2700x
GPU : ASUS turbo 1080
Ram : 8gb x 2 klevv 3000mhz
SSD : 500gb samsung evo 860
CPU Cooler : Cooler master 212 evo
PSU : CM Lite 700W
Anyone facing this issue with MSI mobos? or should I upgrade my CPU cooler?
From all the YouTube videos I've watched, getting 4.2ghz is easy
Any tips to help a fellow gamer?
Numerous videos demonstrate around 4.2 as a solid core OC. Therefore, 4.15 falls within acceptable limits. For gaming and everyday tasks, enabling XFR2 and PBO allows the system to adjust its BIOS or CPU clock, resulting in better performance under varied workloads. This is where you achieve the 4.35, rather than relying solely on manual full-core overclocking.
Numerous videos demonstrate around 4.2 as a solid core OC. Therefore, 4.15 falls within acceptable limits. For gaming and everyday tasks, enabling XFR2 and PBO allows the system to adjust its BIOS or CPU clock, resulting in better performance under varied workloads. This is where you achieve the 4.35, rather than relying solely on manual full-core overclocking.
To raise your clocks further, you may need additional adjustments. Fine-tune your load line and voltage a bit more.
The 50c idle temperature is worrying—did you correctly install the cooler?
AgentLozen :
I've seen that top Ryzen 2700X samples rarely exceed 4.3GHz. It looks like 4.1GHz could be the typical cap for any 2700X model.
people using the stock wraith coolers can reach 4.2 easily, that's not fair hahahaha
exroofer :
Numerous videos indicate around 4.2 with all-core overclocking. So 4.15 falls within what's possible. For gaming and everyday use, enabling XFR2 and PBO lets the BIOS or CPU clock run higher, which boosts speeds even when not hitting all cores at once. That’s where you hit 4.35—not just manual all-core overclocking.
updated the newest vios version, tried everything I could think of, but it still isn't working
🙁
gasaraki :
To push your clocks higher, you might need more precise tuning. Tweak your load line and voltage further.
I’ll give it another shot later, but the stock voltage was around 1.35+ when it first came in—maybe a faulty motherboard?
Rogue Leader :
The 50c idle temperature is a red flag. Are you confident the cooler was installed correctly?
What concerns me most is the heat; I was too careless and asked the shop to install it for me. If the issue continues, I’ll take it apart and fix it again while monitoring...
Weswesleylyr94 shared concerns about the cooler installation and temperature readings. They mentioned being too lazy to install it themselves and expressed worry if the issue continues. They also advised monitoring temperatures closely before further troubleshooting.
AgentLozen: The cooling issue might not be the main cause for the Ryzen overclocking. I saw a similar situation in that ( ) review. They said the Ryzen 2400G isn't temperature limited. Another factor could be preventing those CPUs from hitting higher clock speeds. The 2400g and 2700x models differ a lot—2400G has half the cores and a built-in Vega GPU. Their performance under overclocking is quite different.