F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking A 600W power supply is adequate for overclocking tasks.

A 600W power supply is adequate for overclocking tasks.

A 600W power supply is adequate for overclocking tasks.

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Velizar06
Posting Freak
865
05-18-2024, 10:29 PM
#1
I recently purchased this "budget" machine:
http://ca.pcpartpicker.com/list/K9vgsJ
I’m looking into the possibility of overclocking my 3.5 GHz Intel i5-6600k to around 4.0~4.2GHz for rendering and video editing tasks (Sony Vegas, Adobe Premiere Pro, Adobe After Effects). Will this upgrade work with my EVGA 600B without causing any issues?
Note: The video card I received is outdated; in my view, spending an additional $250 for a better one wasn’t justified for video editing. Please share your thoughts. Also, I’m fine with a 250GB HDD.
V
Velizar06
05-18-2024, 10:29 PM #1

I recently purchased this "budget" machine:
http://ca.pcpartpicker.com/list/K9vgsJ
I’m looking into the possibility of overclocking my 3.5 GHz Intel i5-6600k to around 4.0~4.2GHz for rendering and video editing tasks (Sony Vegas, Adobe Premiere Pro, Adobe After Effects). Will this upgrade work with my EVGA 600B without causing any issues?
Note: The video card I received is outdated; in my view, spending an additional $250 for a better one wasn’t justified for video editing. Please share your thoughts. Also, I’m fine with a 250GB HDD.

S
SirJoeGV
Junior Member
33
05-18-2024, 10:29 PM
#2
This power supply works well for simple tasks. It's not ideal for overclocking since its quality isn't top-tier.
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SirJoeGV
05-18-2024, 10:29 PM #2

This power supply works well for simple tasks. It's not ideal for overclocking since its quality isn't top-tier.

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pigleterono007
Junior Member
8
05-18-2024, 10:29 PM
#3
This power supply works well for simple tasks. It's not ideal for overclocking since its quality isn't top-tier.
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pigleterono007
05-18-2024, 10:29 PM #3

This power supply works well for simple tasks. It's not ideal for overclocking since its quality isn't top-tier.