F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Adjusted voltage settings on my R5 3500 to improve performance.

Adjusted voltage settings on my R5 3500 to improve performance.

Adjusted voltage settings on my R5 3500 to improve performance.

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Bay900
Junior Member
11
05-07-2016, 03:17 PM
#1
You own a Ryzen 5 3500 6C6T with strong performance specs. When all-core boosting is enabled, the stable voltage settles around 1.36V with a maximum temperature of 65°C after extended manual overclocking in Ryzen Master. This is your typical range for multipliers and voltages used during gaming and regular tasks. Running a GTX 1060 with 6GB VRAM, you can handle most games smoothly using just the 36x or 41x profiles without any noticeable lag. There’s no performance drop from these multipliers, and your CPU cooler maintains a maximum temperature of 50°C. Regarding undervolting: running the CPU at lower voltages doesn’t seem to cause issues, but long-term stability isn’t guaranteed as components age (3-4 years). It’s best to keep an eye on temperatures and performance trends over time.
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Bay900
05-07-2016, 03:17 PM #1

You own a Ryzen 5 3500 6C6T with strong performance specs. When all-core boosting is enabled, the stable voltage settles around 1.36V with a maximum temperature of 65°C after extended manual overclocking in Ryzen Master. This is your typical range for multipliers and voltages used during gaming and regular tasks. Running a GTX 1060 with 6GB VRAM, you can handle most games smoothly using just the 36x or 41x profiles without any noticeable lag. There’s no performance drop from these multipliers, and your CPU cooler maintains a maximum temperature of 50°C. Regarding undervolting: running the CPU at lower voltages doesn’t seem to cause issues, but long-term stability isn’t guaranteed as components age (3-4 years). It’s best to keep an eye on temperatures and performance trends over time.

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MavrosGR
Senior Member
579
05-07-2016, 03:59 PM
#2
That's really good. I don't see a problem with that. Like damaging it? No. With undervolting? No. Setting a high voltage causes degration not undervolting.
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MavrosGR
05-07-2016, 03:59 PM #2

That's really good. I don't see a problem with that. Like damaging it? No. With undervolting? No. Setting a high voltage causes degration not undervolting.

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lizardlover420
Junior Member
8
05-07-2016, 09:01 PM
#3
thats playing a game, when runing cibeR20 it reaches 69c and im using 280mm AIO (h110i) so theres no downside running on lower voltages, okay then ill be happy with just the 36x and 41x multipliers profile
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lizardlover420
05-07-2016, 09:01 PM #3

thats playing a game, when runing cibeR20 it reaches 69c and im using 280mm AIO (h110i) so theres no downside running on lower voltages, okay then ill be happy with just the 36x and 41x multipliers profile

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Tyliliboy222
Junior Member
10
05-23-2016, 02:59 AM
#4
Even with the h110i, these temperatures remain fairly decent. If they stay consistent, it's fine.
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Tyliliboy222
05-23-2016, 02:59 AM #4

Even with the h110i, these temperatures remain fairly decent. If they stay consistent, it's fine.

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chloe_gamer
Member
104
05-23-2016, 10:26 AM
#5
Oh... I thought it might be lower in stability. My readings are 1-2 clicks higher than the real stable values, and I've followed my normal routine without any BSOD or crashes.
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chloe_gamer
05-23-2016, 10:26 AM #5

Oh... I thought it might be lower in stability. My readings are 1-2 clicks higher than the real stable values, and I've followed my normal routine without any BSOD or crashes.

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Streiyn
Posting Freak
768
05-23-2016, 11:55 AM
#6
There are no additional penalties beyond the clear reduced multiplier.
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Streiyn
05-23-2016, 11:55 AM #6

There are no additional penalties beyond the clear reduced multiplier.

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stevietibbits
Member
55
06-13-2016, 04:50 AM
#7
Good job. Thank you.
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stevietibbits
06-13-2016, 04:50 AM #7

Good job. Thank you.