F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Adjusting performance settings on a Dell motherboard

Adjusting performance settings on a Dell motherboard

Adjusting performance settings on a Dell motherboard

M
mendyhetdortje
Junior Member
7
06-08-2016, 11:11 AM
#1
Hello, your Dell Optiplex 5040 MT uses an i5-6500 CPU. You're considering upgrading to an i5-6600K for potential overclocking, keeping cooling in mind. Can these boards support the CPU overclock? It doesn't matter if it's official, but I'm curious—have anyone tried this and achieved success? You mentioned you can manage liquid cooling to handle heat, and you're worried about changing the CPU itself.
M
mendyhetdortje
06-08-2016, 11:11 AM #1

Hello, your Dell Optiplex 5040 MT uses an i5-6500 CPU. You're considering upgrading to an i5-6600K for potential overclocking, keeping cooling in mind. Can these boards support the CPU overclock? It doesn't matter if it's official, but I'm curious—have anyone tried this and achieved success? You mentioned you can manage liquid cooling to handle heat, and you're worried about changing the CPU itself.

A
AskedRumble52
Member
216
06-09-2016, 09:54 PM
#2
It’s unlikely you could boost the speed beyond what the board supports. It seems Dell designed it so no software can function at all.
A
AskedRumble52
06-09-2016, 09:54 PM #2

It’s unlikely you could boost the speed beyond what the board supports. It seems Dell designed it so no software can function at all.

S
Sihere
Member
187
06-28-2016, 08:51 PM
#3
The Q170 chipset doesn't allow overclocking. For experimenting with Intel Core series chips, you'll need a Z series motherboard. With AMD Ryzen, a B or X series board is required. It's also wise to choose a non-OEM board for this chipset, since companies like Dell, Lenovo, HP often omit overclocking support in their BIOS.
S
Sihere
06-28-2016, 08:51 PM #3

The Q170 chipset doesn't allow overclocking. For experimenting with Intel Core series chips, you'll need a Z series motherboard. With AMD Ryzen, a B or X series board is required. It's also wise to choose a non-OEM board for this chipset, since companies like Dell, Lenovo, HP often omit overclocking support in their BIOS.

D
Dragonize
Member
181
06-29-2016, 06:22 PM
#4
Got it, thanks!
D
Dragonize
06-29-2016, 06:22 PM #4

Got it, thanks!