F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking 4.7ghz i5 6600k at no voltage boost

4.7ghz i5 6600k at no voltage boost

4.7ghz i5 6600k at no voltage boost

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Redz
Member
118
03-24-2016, 11:47 PM
#1
Hey, I'm here to help. You've managed to overclock your 6600k to 4.7ghz without changing the voltage, and after running some tests it seems stable with temperatures staying under 50°C. That's a good sign. Since you haven't overclocked before and are just concerned about making a mistake, it looks like you're on the right track. No need to worry—everything seems fine so far.
R
Redz
03-24-2016, 11:47 PM #1

Hey, I'm here to help. You've managed to overclock your 6600k to 4.7ghz without changing the voltage, and after running some tests it seems stable with temperatures staying under 50°C. That's a good sign. Since you haven't overclocked before and are just concerned about making a mistake, it looks like you're on the right track. No need to worry—everything seems fine so far.

P
ProffesorFrog
Member
137
03-25-2016, 04:17 AM
#2
This approach doesn't quite fit the situation. I haven't seen anyone running an i5 6600k overclocked at 4.7GHz without adjusting the vcore. That's impressive, though, if accurate, so congratulations. To verify stability, try using both a CPU stress test program and a GPU stress test simultaneously, and run them for several hours. If everything runs smoothly without any crashes, then the overclock is stable. If not, it likely means the vcore needs adjustment. The temperatures look acceptable if they match your gaming sessions, so you probably don't need to worry about that.
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ProffesorFrog
03-25-2016, 04:17 AM #2

This approach doesn't quite fit the situation. I haven't seen anyone running an i5 6600k overclocked at 4.7GHz without adjusting the vcore. That's impressive, though, if accurate, so congratulations. To verify stability, try using both a CPU stress test program and a GPU stress test simultaneously, and run them for several hours. If everything runs smoothly without any crashes, then the overclock is stable. If not, it likely means the vcore needs adjustment. The temperatures look acceptable if they match your gaming sessions, so you probably don't need to worry about that.

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evercloud09
Junior Member
21
03-25-2016, 10:52 AM
#3
This approach doesn't quite fit the situation. I haven't seen anyone running an i5 6600k overclocked at 4.7GHz without adjusting the vcore. That's impressive, though, if accurate, so congratulations.
To verify stability, try using both a CPU stress tester like Aida64 and a GPU tool such as FurMark simultaneously for several hours. If the system runs without any crashes, the overclock is secure.
If crashes occur, it likely means the vcore needs raising. Temperatures are acceptable if they match your gaming sessions, so you probably don't need to worry much.
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evercloud09
03-25-2016, 10:52 AM #3

This approach doesn't quite fit the situation. I haven't seen anyone running an i5 6600k overclocked at 4.7GHz without adjusting the vcore. That's impressive, though, if accurate, so congratulations.
To verify stability, try using both a CPU stress tester like Aida64 and a GPU tool such as FurMark simultaneously for several hours. If the system runs without any crashes, the overclock is secure.
If crashes occur, it likely means the vcore needs raising. Temperatures are acceptable if they match your gaming sessions, so you probably don't need to worry much.