F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Can I overclock my APU?

Can I overclock my APU?

Can I overclock my APU?

R
Rainwow
Junior Member
19
11-15-2017, 06:04 PM
#1
The specifications are as follows:
CPU Ryzen 5 2400g- Stock wraith stealth cooler 3.60GHz
Ballistix Sport LT 8GB Single DDR4 2400
Thermaltake Smart 500W 80+ White Continuous Power
B350 Tomahawk motherboard
1 TB HDD
R
Rainwow
11-15-2017, 06:04 PM #1

The specifications are as follows:
CPU Ryzen 5 2400g- Stock wraith stealth cooler 3.60GHz
Ballistix Sport LT 8GB Single DDR4 2400
Thermaltake Smart 500W 80+ White Continuous Power
B350 Tomahawk motherboard
1 TB HDD

_
_ItzYoloHD_
Junior Member
16
11-17-2017, 07:40 AM
#2
You're experiencing a significant drop in performance, losing 40-50% right away with a single RAM stick. That's ignoring the potential gains from using faster RAM as well. The recommended minimum for a Ryzen 2200/2400g is a 2 x 4 kit at 2666mhz. You can increase the CPU speed by about 10%, but this won't fully compensate for those kinds of losses.
_
_ItzYoloHD_
11-17-2017, 07:40 AM #2

You're experiencing a significant drop in performance, losing 40-50% right away with a single RAM stick. That's ignoring the potential gains from using faster RAM as well. The recommended minimum for a Ryzen 2200/2400g is a 2 x 4 kit at 2666mhz. You can increase the CPU speed by about 10%, but this won't fully compensate for those kinds of losses.

M
MrTanasis
Junior Member
12
11-18-2017, 12:06 AM
#3
Your main issue seems to be the processor's sluggishness and insufficient RAM, which limits its ability to achieve even basic performance levels. The built-in GPU is only marginally improved compared to models like the GTX 1030 or Rx 550, but with slow RAM it becomes nearly impossible to reach those standards. You can only optimize the processor itself, as I've observed, and GPU overclocking offers little to no benefit.
M
MrTanasis
11-18-2017, 12:06 AM #3

Your main issue seems to be the processor's sluggishness and insufficient RAM, which limits its ability to achieve even basic performance levels. The built-in GPU is only marginally improved compared to models like the GTX 1030 or Rx 550, but with slow RAM it becomes nearly impossible to reach those standards. You can only optimize the processor itself, as I've observed, and GPU overclocking offers little to no benefit.

M
Mr_StarYT
Junior Member
46
11-18-2017, 03:54 AM
#4
The tool includes options for adjusting "APU GFX Speeds" in AMD's Ryzen Master.
M
Mr_StarYT
11-18-2017, 03:54 AM #4

The tool includes options for adjusting "APU GFX Speeds" in AMD's Ryzen Master.

W
WereWolf87
Member
74
11-18-2017, 10:13 PM
#5
You're experiencing a significant drop in performance, losing 40-50% right away with just one RAM stick. That's ignoring the potential gains from using faster RAM as well. The recommended minimum for a Ryzen 2200/2400g is a 2 x 4 kit at 2666mhz. You can boost the CPU by about 10%, but that won't fully compensate for those kinds of losses.
W
WereWolf87
11-18-2017, 10:13 PM #5

You're experiencing a significant drop in performance, losing 40-50% right away with just one RAM stick. That's ignoring the potential gains from using faster RAM as well. The recommended minimum for a Ryzen 2200/2400g is a 2 x 4 kit at 2666mhz. You can boost the CPU by about 10%, but that won't fully compensate for those kinds of losses.

R
RuenixYT
Member
66
11-25-2017, 07:43 PM
#6
You're experiencing a significant drop in performance by relying on just one RAM stick, ignoring the potential gains from faster RAM as well. The recommended setup for Ryzen 2200/2400G should be a 2 x 4 kit at 2666MHz. You can overclock this CPU by about 10%, but it won't fully compensate for those kinds of losses.
R
RuenixYT
11-25-2017, 07:43 PM #6

You're experiencing a significant drop in performance by relying on just one RAM stick, ignoring the potential gains from faster RAM as well. The recommended setup for Ryzen 2200/2400G should be a 2 x 4 kit at 2666MHz. You can overclock this CPU by about 10%, but it won't fully compensate for those kinds of losses.

1
10ukkie10
Member
180
11-27-2017, 08:32 PM
#7
I get more advantage from exceeding that RAM speed than from using APU.
I've used Ballistix 2400 at 2933mhz on an ASRock B350 board—it worked okay for gaming but didn't perform well with rendering tasks.
It has also been running at 2666mhz consistently for the last eight months.
1
10ukkie10
11-27-2017, 08:32 PM #7

I get more advantage from exceeding that RAM speed than from using APU.
I've used Ballistix 2400 at 2933mhz on an ASRock B350 board—it worked okay for gaming but didn't perform well with rendering tasks.
It has also been running at 2666mhz consistently for the last eight months.

S
Splax67
Member
190
12-17-2017, 01:22 AM
#8
Are the CPU's dual channel and 2400mhz features actually displayed?
Does the tomahawk include a 'memory try it' setting in the BIOS?
The mortar & pc mate confirm it functions very well for a single-tier hike up, boosting speed from standard RAM settings.
S
Splax67
12-17-2017, 01:22 AM #8

Are the CPU's dual channel and 2400mhz features actually displayed?
Does the tomahawk include a 'memory try it' setting in the BIOS?
The mortar & pc mate confirm it functions very well for a single-tier hike up, boosting speed from standard RAM settings.

E
EHB2112
Member
136
12-24-2017, 05:57 PM
#9
The CPU is displaying dual channel and 2400mhz speed. The tomahawk has a 'memory try it' option in BIOS. The mortar & pc mate confirm it works well for single tier hikes up on speed from default RAM speeds. Yes, the settings show "channel# dual" and "DRAM frequency 1199.3-1201.0 MHz". With your current hardware, here are some suggestions to run GTA 5 at 40+ fps:
E
EHB2112
12-24-2017, 05:57 PM #9

The CPU is displaying dual channel and 2400mhz speed. The tomahawk has a 'memory try it' option in BIOS. The mortar & pc mate confirm it works well for single tier hikes up on speed from default RAM speeds. Yes, the settings show "channel# dual" and "DRAM frequency 1199.3-1201.0 MHz". With your current hardware, here are some suggestions to run GTA 5 at 40+ fps:

M
MCpro2016
Junior Member
12
12-24-2017, 06:03 PM
#10
Your simple method is to adjust the game resolution to 720p with FXAA turned on.
Adjust the detail sliders to roughly one-third of the top, and keep everything else at high.
This should maintain about 50fps consistently.
Alternatively, try 1080p, turn off FXAA and MSAA, set sliders to around 20%, and lower all other options to medium.
This should ensure a minimum of 40fps.
With an 8GB 2400MHz RAM setup, the 720p choice will perform better—reducing the strain on RAM at that resolution.
M
MCpro2016
12-24-2017, 06:03 PM #10

Your simple method is to adjust the game resolution to 720p with FXAA turned on.
Adjust the detail sliders to roughly one-third of the top, and keep everything else at high.
This should maintain about 50fps consistently.
Alternatively, try 1080p, turn off FXAA and MSAA, set sliders to around 20%, and lower all other options to medium.
This should ensure a minimum of 40fps.
With an 8GB 2400MHz RAM setup, the 720p choice will perform better—reducing the strain on RAM at that resolution.