F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking [ANSWERED]Worrying...

[ANSWERED]Worrying...

[ANSWERED]Worrying...

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Vertigo___
Member
64
06-11-2026, 02:56 AM
#11
So I reset my bios to default, turned on dcop and set ppt and tdc to 350 and edc to 150 with x10 scalar and +200mhz and set power to offset mode -0.1250 now the pc is smoother and stronger with decent temps thanks a lot for your advice man! And yeah i tried putting edc to 10 but it didn't work because it shows that it's stronger but actual speed doesn't go over 3.3 ghz while cenabencg r20 score dropped by 1509 points on multi cores in k mode this is just a visual bug and actually slows your pc down. But anw thanks for the advice now everything runs smoother
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Vertigo___
06-11-2026, 02:56 AM #11

So I reset my bios to default, turned on dcop and set ppt and tdc to 350 and edc to 150 with x10 scalar and +200mhz and set power to offset mode -0.1250 now the pc is smoother and stronger with decent temps thanks a lot for your advice man! And yeah i tried putting edc to 10 but it didn't work because it shows that it's stronger but actual speed doesn't go over 3.3 ghz while cenabencg r20 score dropped by 1509 points on multi cores in k mode this is just a visual bug and actually slows your pc down. But anw thanks for the advice now everything runs smoother

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IvyTheCat
Member
208
06-11-2026, 03:28 AM
#12
Good news: it's working! Try tweaking the offset, like -0.1250 volts. Experiment by going up or down from there to see which setting matches your gear best.
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IvyTheCat
06-11-2026, 03:28 AM #12

Good news: it's working! Try tweaking the offset, like -0.1250 volts. Experiment by going up or down from there to see which setting matches your gear best.

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Sparkle_Mage
Member
206
06-18-2026, 05:36 PM
#13
Boost speeds aren't just about temperature. They also change based on voltages, current levels, and how everything connects together. So you can set higher limits, but maybe they only boost some cores while others don't get a single degree hotter. If your non-preferred cores get that extra heat, then the overall performance score drops instead of going up. It feels like a game where every move has to be perfect or someone gets hurt. Even if your partner looks amazing on screen, their action could cause real harm behind the scenes. Putting an OC on a Ryzen isn't just about looking at numbers; it's about how you use them and what impact they have on other things going on.
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Sparkle_Mage
06-18-2026, 05:36 PM #13

Boost speeds aren't just about temperature. They also change based on voltages, current levels, and how everything connects together. So you can set higher limits, but maybe they only boost some cores while others don't get a single degree hotter. If your non-preferred cores get that extra heat, then the overall performance score drops instead of going up. It feels like a game where every move has to be perfect or someone gets hurt. Even if your partner looks amazing on screen, their action could cause real harm behind the scenes. Putting an OC on a Ryzen isn't just about looking at numbers; it's about how you use them and what impact they have on other things going on.

C
CH_2000
Member
52
06-18-2026, 06:37 PM
#14
So... I figured out why my PC was acting weird, so now I made it run faster and use more power. I set every core to 4.425 gigahertz while keeping the voltage at 1.325 volts. My new score on Cinebench R20 is 5133 for all cores, and my single-core test shows a ratio of 10.14 with 1.04 speed. I ran AIDA64 for thirty minutes without any errors. Then I used the CPU-Z stress tool to push it hard for four hours, and everything stayed stable! The heat got down as low as 34.5 degrees Celsius and up to 77 during Cinebench tests and even lower while being stressed at 81.8 degrees. What went wrong? It turns out I forgot that you can tweak the fan settings on a Corsair H150i Pro. It was set to quiet mode by default, but when I turned it to balance, the fan speed dropped from 900 RPM down to 2010 and the temperature stayed very cool. Even more so, putting it in extreme mode bumped the RAM up to 2800 RPM and cut the heat by an extra 2 or 3 degrees. How did I do this? I turned on D.C.P.O. Enabled Performance Enhancer at level three (overclock) and set the Core multiplier to 44.25. I had no choice because if I tried to adjust the voltage manually, my PC wouldn't start up properly. So I'm stuck with manual voltage right now.
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CH_2000
06-18-2026, 06:37 PM #14

So... I figured out why my PC was acting weird, so now I made it run faster and use more power. I set every core to 4.425 gigahertz while keeping the voltage at 1.325 volts. My new score on Cinebench R20 is 5133 for all cores, and my single-core test shows a ratio of 10.14 with 1.04 speed. I ran AIDA64 for thirty minutes without any errors. Then I used the CPU-Z stress tool to push it hard for four hours, and everything stayed stable! The heat got down as low as 34.5 degrees Celsius and up to 77 during Cinebench tests and even lower while being stressed at 81.8 degrees. What went wrong? It turns out I forgot that you can tweak the fan settings on a Corsair H150i Pro. It was set to quiet mode by default, but when I turned it to balance, the fan speed dropped from 900 RPM down to 2010 and the temperature stayed very cool. Even more so, putting it in extreme mode bumped the RAM up to 2800 RPM and cut the heat by an extra 2 or 3 degrees. How did I do this? I turned on D.C.P.O. Enabled Performance Enhancer at level three (overclock) and set the Core multiplier to 44.25. I had no choice because if I tried to adjust the voltage manually, my PC wouldn't start up properly. So I'm stuck with manual voltage right now.

K
157
06-22-2026, 11:15 PM
#15
What is the goal here? Are you chasing world records? Is this just for daily tasks? If so, running at that speed isn't sustainable for normal use because your power usage shoots up when things get heavy. The CPU stops trying to keep a steady current on its own under these conditions.
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KariibikUrlxub
06-22-2026, 11:15 PM #15

What is the goal here? Are you chasing world records? Is this just for daily tasks? If so, running at that speed isn't sustainable for normal use because your power usage shoots up when things get heavy. The CPU stops trying to keep a steady current on its own under these conditions.

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josiecatz__10
Senior Member
640
06-25-2026, 04:14 AM
#16
Only looking at numbers
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josiecatz__10
06-25-2026, 04:14 AM #16

Only looking at numbers

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SkullyRoger
Member
147
07-02-2026, 10:06 AM
#17
Alright, that works for me too.
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SkullyRoger
07-02-2026, 10:06 AM #17

Alright, that works for me too.

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