F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Can I boost the performance of an i7-3770 without using a non-K CPU on a Gigabyte Z77-DS3H motherboard?

Can I boost the performance of an i7-3770 without using a non-K CPU on a Gigabyte Z77-DS3H motherboard?

Can I boost the performance of an i7-3770 without using a non-K CPU on a Gigabyte Z77-DS3H motherboard?

D
DaNiggaSWAG
Senior Member
539
01-17-2025, 04:40 AM
#1
Hello, I'm checking if it's possible to overclock a non-K i7-3770 CPU on the Gigabyte Z77-DS3H motherboard. I've noticed others doing this on these boards, but the Turbo Boost isn't very high—around 3.9Ghz compared to the stock 3.4Ghz. I'm considering boosting it slightly to 4.2Ghz or 4.1Ghz, whether on 2 cores or all 4. I'd like your expert advice on whether this is feasible and how much performance gain is realistic.
D
DaNiggaSWAG
01-17-2025, 04:40 AM #1

Hello, I'm checking if it's possible to overclock a non-K i7-3770 CPU on the Gigabyte Z77-DS3H motherboard. I've noticed others doing this on these boards, but the Turbo Boost isn't very high—around 3.9Ghz compared to the stock 3.4Ghz. I'm considering boosting it slightly to 4.2Ghz or 4.1Ghz, whether on 2 cores or all 4. I'd like your expert advice on whether this is feasible and how much performance gain is realistic.

T
Tao200
Junior Member
46
01-17-2025, 05:55 AM
#2
You might consider it, though results show limited performance gains.
T
Tao200
01-17-2025, 05:55 AM #2

You might consider it, though results show limited performance gains.

S
SGSnake21
Junior Member
43
02-05-2025, 01:16 AM
#3
In non-k series CPUs the multiplier will remain fixed.
The only method to change the CPU is by increasing the BCLK, though this may cause problems... I won't advise doing so. You might still attempt it.
Avoid altering voltages as well.
Even if possible, the performance improvements will be small.
S
SGSnake21
02-05-2025, 01:16 AM #3

In non-k series CPUs the multiplier will remain fixed.
The only method to change the CPU is by increasing the BCLK, though this may cause problems... I won't advise doing so. You might still attempt it.
Avoid altering voltages as well.
Even if possible, the performance improvements will be small.

A
agent_193
Junior Member
9
02-05-2025, 06:25 AM
#4
In the case of non-k series CPUs the multiplier will be locked. The only method to OC that CPU is by slightly increasing the BCLK, though this may cause problems... I wouldn't suggest it. You might still attempt it. Also, avoid changing voltages. The performance improvements are limited anyway. However, some users have successfully overclocked it up to 4.3Ghz and achieved stability, which is what I'm curious about, although the gains are modest.
A
agent_193
02-05-2025, 06:25 AM #4

In the case of non-k series CPUs the multiplier will be locked. The only method to OC that CPU is by slightly increasing the BCLK, though this may cause problems... I wouldn't suggest it. You might still attempt it. Also, avoid changing voltages. The performance improvements are limited anyway. However, some users have successfully overclocked it up to 4.3Ghz and achieved stability, which is what I'm curious about, although the gains are modest.

H
hangman12298
Member
212
02-05-2025, 07:24 AM
#5
You might attempt it, though results show limited performance gains.
H
hangman12298
02-05-2025, 07:24 AM #5

You might attempt it, though results show limited performance gains.

A
AntonTheMiner
Member
61
02-27-2025, 06:19 AM
#6
I strongly differ from the other reply. Based on my experience, I haven’t encountered any problems increasing the turbo multiplier beyond 4 bins on i5-2400 and i7-2600 with Z77/Z68/P67 boards. I believe you should be able to reach 4.3 quite easily (up to a maximum of 43 multipliers). You can avoid modifying the b clock or voltages if you prefer. Depending on your cooling setup, you might need to experiment with voltage adjustments to achieve lower temperatures, since the auto setting tends to be quite lenient with voltage. Small tweaks to the b clock can also help, though they are less stable. Still, I have run my 2600 non-K at 4.3 for some time without any issues, but results may vary. It’s best to start with the multiplier adjustment first. (I’d begin with something like 3.9 stock → 4.3 GHz with multiplier, then 4.3 x 1.025 base clock = 4.4 GHz).)

As far as I understand, this feature is only available on 1155 chips, and I’m aware some boards didn’t support it. However, I successfully adjusted the turbo multiplier on my Gigabyte Z68 board, so it’s worth trying. Moving from 3.9 to 4.3 isn’t a major change, but it may give you a slight performance improvement if your CPU is the bottleneck.
A
AntonTheMiner
02-27-2025, 06:19 AM #6

I strongly differ from the other reply. Based on my experience, I haven’t encountered any problems increasing the turbo multiplier beyond 4 bins on i5-2400 and i7-2600 with Z77/Z68/P67 boards. I believe you should be able to reach 4.3 quite easily (up to a maximum of 43 multipliers). You can avoid modifying the b clock or voltages if you prefer. Depending on your cooling setup, you might need to experiment with voltage adjustments to achieve lower temperatures, since the auto setting tends to be quite lenient with voltage. Small tweaks to the b clock can also help, though they are less stable. Still, I have run my 2600 non-K at 4.3 for some time without any issues, but results may vary. It’s best to start with the multiplier adjustment first. (I’d begin with something like 3.9 stock → 4.3 GHz with multiplier, then 4.3 x 1.025 base clock = 4.4 GHz).)

As far as I understand, this feature is only available on 1155 chips, and I’m aware some boards didn’t support it. However, I successfully adjusted the turbo multiplier on my Gigabyte Z68 board, so it’s worth trying. Moving from 3.9 to 4.3 isn’t a major change, but it may give you a slight performance improvement if your CPU is the bottleneck.

E
EpicSwagACorn
Member
55
02-27-2025, 06:58 AM
#7
As mentioned by pistolpete69, beyond Ivy Bridge, it's possible to boost the multiplier by up to four on non-K CPUs with a Z-series mobo. Additional features like Multi-Core-Enhancement (MCE) are needed to restrict the all-core multiplier to its maximum, allowing performance around 4.3GHz overall (3.9GHz with MCE plus an additional 400MHz on the multiplier).
E
EpicSwagACorn
02-27-2025, 06:58 AM #7

As mentioned by pistolpete69, beyond Ivy Bridge, it's possible to boost the multiplier by up to four on non-K CPUs with a Z-series mobo. Additional features like Multi-Core-Enhancement (MCE) are needed to restrict the all-core multiplier to its maximum, allowing performance around 4.3GHz overall (3.9GHz with MCE plus an additional 400MHz on the multiplier).