F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Adjusting performance of i5-6400 using z170-k

Adjusting performance of i5-6400 using z170-k

Adjusting performance of i5-6400 using z170-k

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TryHardPro1
Member
114
03-10-2022, 06:56 AM
#1
Your components include a z170-k motherboard, an i5-6400 2.70GHz CPU, a GTX 750ti GPU, and 8GB of RAM. What options do you have for overclocking? Need guidance.
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TryHardPro1
03-10-2022, 06:56 AM #1

Your components include a z170-k motherboard, an i5-6400 2.70GHz CPU, a GTX 750ti GPU, and 8GB of RAM. What options do you have for overclocking? Need guidance.

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Soumuitoruim
Member
88
03-10-2022, 10:34 AM
#2
you can easily boost the i5-6400 to 4.05GHz (this is my current setting), you must have a motherboard bios version with skylake non-k overclocking capability. I believe all manufacturers provided official bios supporting this feature, although under pressure from intel later they removed it in subsequent bios versions. it remains available for Asrock models. when updating your motherboard with the right bios, just configure bclk to 150, set cpu vcore voltage to 1.2V, and keep ram at 2600MHz—done!
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Soumuitoruim
03-10-2022, 10:34 AM #2

you can easily boost the i5-6400 to 4.05GHz (this is my current setting), you must have a motherboard bios version with skylake non-k overclocking capability. I believe all manufacturers provided official bios supporting this feature, although under pressure from intel later they removed it in subsequent bios versions. it remains available for Asrock models. when updating your motherboard with the right bios, just configure bclk to 150, set cpu vcore voltage to 1.2V, and keep ram at 2600MHz—done!

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Boby0097
Junior Member
6
03-10-2022, 05:49 PM
#3
Intel has really tightened restrictions on non-K overclocking. Some motherboard makers were trying to push the boundaries, but Intel removed those choices for users with BIOS and Windows updates. You're likely left with only adjusting BCLK, and it's unlikely you'll get much performance from the CPU before it starts acting up. It probably isn't worth it; CPUs like the 6500 and 6400 aren't just non-K because Intel wants to divide the market, but they're actually the least tested models, so they'll be even harder to overclock compared to a 6600k, unless you're willing to risk stability.
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Boby0097
03-10-2022, 05:49 PM #3

Intel has really tightened restrictions on non-K overclocking. Some motherboard makers were trying to push the boundaries, but Intel removed those choices for users with BIOS and Windows updates. You're likely left with only adjusting BCLK, and it's unlikely you'll get much performance from the CPU before it starts acting up. It probably isn't worth it; CPUs like the 6500 and 6400 aren't just non-K because Intel wants to divide the market, but they're actually the least tested models, so they'll be even harder to overclock compared to a 6600k, unless you're willing to risk stability.

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Ozwego
Member
191
03-11-2022, 01:22 PM
#4
In short, you're implying it's not beneficial to push the system beyond its optimal performance.
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Ozwego
03-11-2022, 01:22 PM #4

In short, you're implying it's not beneficial to push the system beyond its optimal performance.

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Robx_33
Member
141
03-19-2022, 01:22 PM
#5
sonic.katheer :
That's what you're implying, right? Just trying it out might not be worth it. BCLK isn't the focus for overclocking; it's the multipliers that matter and they're fixed.
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Robx_33
03-19-2022, 01:22 PM #5

sonic.katheer :
That's what you're implying, right? Just trying it out might not be worth it. BCLK isn't the focus for overclocking; it's the multipliers that matter and they're fixed.

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rinatajima
Junior Member
43
03-19-2022, 05:37 PM
#6
you can easily boost the i5-6400 to 4.05GHz (this is my current setting), you must have a motherboard bios version with skylake non-k overclocking capability. I believe all manufacturers provided official bios supporting this feature, although under pressure from intel later they removed it in subsequent bios versions. it remains available for Asrock models. when updating your motherboard with the right bios, just configure bclk to 150, set cpu vcore voltage to 1.2V, keep ram at 2600MHz and that’s sufficient.
R
rinatajima
03-19-2022, 05:37 PM #6

you can easily boost the i5-6400 to 4.05GHz (this is my current setting), you must have a motherboard bios version with skylake non-k overclocking capability. I believe all manufacturers provided official bios supporting this feature, although under pressure from intel later they removed it in subsequent bios versions. it remains available for Asrock models. when updating your motherboard with the right bios, just configure bclk to 150, set cpu vcore voltage to 1.2V, keep ram at 2600MHz and that’s sufficient.