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Asus AI Overclocking technique améliore les performances des processeurs.

Asus AI Overclocking technique améliore les performances des processeurs.

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Dagur011
Junior Member
18
10-14-2024, 08:35 AM
#1
Hello everyone! I often try turning on Asus AI Overclock during each bios update, but whenever this issue arises—system crashes under heavy loads with Cinebench R20, The Last of Us Part 1, and AIDA64 FPU tests—I’m puzzled. Do you know why this happens? My system specs match the ones I usually use.
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Dagur011
10-14-2024, 08:35 AM #1

Hello everyone! I often try turning on Asus AI Overclock during each bios update, but whenever this issue arises—system crashes under heavy loads with Cinebench R20, The Last of Us Part 1, and AIDA64 FPU tests—I’m puzzled. Do you know why this happens? My system specs match the ones I usually use.

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AwsomeFace2
Member
202
10-14-2024, 11:49 AM
#2
ASUS's AI overclocking techniques often require excessive voltage or unrealistic clock settings without proper adjustments, which can cause overheating or instability. Disable it and use PBO instead; other Ryzen overclocking methods are much more effective. For serious performance gains, experiment with Asynchronous ECLK combined with PBO—this approach may boost speed by 5-7% depending on the chip and offers better results than AI overclocking.
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AwsomeFace2
10-14-2024, 11:49 AM #2

ASUS's AI overclocking techniques often require excessive voltage or unrealistic clock settings without proper adjustments, which can cause overheating or instability. Disable it and use PBO instead; other Ryzen overclocking methods are much more effective. For serious performance gains, experiment with Asynchronous ECLK combined with PBO—this approach may boost speed by 5-7% depending on the chip and offers better results than AI overclocking.

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FFrow_
Member
54
10-15-2024, 05:58 AM
#3
This seems like a lot of effort for just a small improvement. You're not pushing too far beyond the usual max plus 200PBO, right? It could cause issues with things like NVMe boot devices if you go too far.
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FFrow_
10-15-2024, 05:58 AM #3

This seems like a lot of effort for just a small improvement. You're not pushing too far beyond the usual max plus 200PBO, right? It could cause issues with things like NVMe boot devices if you go too far.

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FionnMacu
Member
147
10-17-2024, 02:39 AM
#4
Sure, you can ask another question. Do you need advice on whether to connect your PSU to Multi or Single? I understand the OCP rules but still aren’t sure what to do.
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FionnMacu
10-17-2024, 02:39 AM #4

Sure, you can ask another question. Do you need advice on whether to connect your PSU to Multi or Single? I understand the OCP rules but still aren’t sure what to do.

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Hermitt
Member
149
10-22-2024, 01:20 PM
#5
I won't. It was interesting watching the clock reach 5.6GHz on a single core.
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Hermitt
10-22-2024, 01:20 PM #5

I won't. It was interesting watching the clock reach 5.6GHz on a single core.

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MinecraftG33k
Junior Member
29
10-23-2024, 06:12 AM
#6
It's an asynchronous process where ECLK overclocking mainly impacts the CPU, not RAM as it does on Intel or PCIe clocks on AM4 and older Intel chips. The PBO frequency boost feature is mostly just a suggestion and doesn't actually improve performance. The main drawback is occasional crashes during idle, similar to using the Curve Optimizer. If you're serious about boosting performance, you might be able to adjust PBO to reach up to 6GHz with enough effort and ECLK. A 5.6GHz single-core speed isn't very impressive. Consider asking someone more experienced for advice. Multi Rail mode has some benefits but can cause issues with high-end GPUs, so use it cautiously. Rely on someone with deeper knowledge.
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MinecraftG33k
10-23-2024, 06:12 AM #6

It's an asynchronous process where ECLK overclocking mainly impacts the CPU, not RAM as it does on Intel or PCIe clocks on AM4 and older Intel chips. The PBO frequency boost feature is mostly just a suggestion and doesn't actually improve performance. The main drawback is occasional crashes during idle, similar to using the Curve Optimizer. If you're serious about boosting performance, you might be able to adjust PBO to reach up to 6GHz with enough effort and ECLK. A 5.6GHz single-core speed isn't very impressive. Consider asking someone more experienced for advice. Multi Rail mode has some benefits but can cause issues with high-end GPUs, so use it cautiously. Rely on someone with deeper knowledge.