F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Can Intel non K CPU be boosted to 4ghz

Can Intel non K CPU be boosted to 4ghz

Can Intel non K CPU be boosted to 4ghz

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xpersoncool
Member
204
01-05-2022, 10:06 PM
#1
There is some information suggesting that certain locked Intel CPUs might reach up to 4ghz, but it's not universally confirmed.
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xpersoncool
01-05-2022, 10:06 PM #1

There is some information suggesting that certain locked Intel CPUs might reach up to 4ghz, but it's not universally confirmed.

E
EL_FirezZ
Junior Member
5
01-11-2022, 11:05 AM
#2
I believe the optimal result comes from maximizing all cores at full boost, which demands a 'Z' motherboard.
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EL_FirezZ
01-11-2022, 11:05 AM #2

I believe the optimal result comes from maximizing all cores at full boost, which demands a 'Z' motherboard.

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D4rKSlayer95
Member
229
01-11-2022, 12:39 PM
#3
In certain situations it might be possible, but the details given aren't sufficient to reach a clear conclusion.
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D4rKSlayer95
01-11-2022, 12:39 PM #3

In certain situations it might be possible, but the details given aren't sufficient to reach a clear conclusion.

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hyperandroid
Junior Member
40
01-18-2022, 03:06 AM
#4
Before Haswell (4xxx), Intel fixed issues with Haswell, and after that, any non-K chips were locked by hardware.
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hyperandroid
01-18-2022, 03:06 AM #4

Before Haswell (4xxx), Intel fixed issues with Haswell, and after that, any non-K chips were locked by hardware.

M
Madi4067
Member
129
01-22-2022, 02:54 AM
#5
It depends on the processor. A decent G3258 might reach it, for instance. However, the general response is no. You might see a slight improvement through BCLK tweaks, but only around 2%.
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Madi4067
01-22-2022, 02:54 AM #5

It depends on the processor. A decent G3258 might reach it, for instance. However, the general response is no. You might see a slight improvement through BCLK tweaks, but only around 2%.

B
Big_Greg96
Junior Member
27
01-22-2022, 08:49 AM
#6
Considering an i5 3570 on a Z77 motherboard, it's worth checking if reaching 4GHz is feasible.
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Big_Greg96
01-22-2022, 08:49 AM #6

Considering an i5 3570 on a Z77 motherboard, it's worth checking if reaching 4GHz is feasible.

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CloseToToast
Member
125
01-29-2022, 01:01 PM
#7
About the multicore improvement or Intel Turbo Boost, I'm not entirely confident, but my H110 Plus board allows my i7 7700 to reach 4 GHz.
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CloseToToast
01-29-2022, 01:01 PM #7

About the multicore improvement or Intel Turbo Boost, I'm not entirely confident, but my H110 Plus board allows my i7 7700 to reach 4 GHz.

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TheDragoclaw
Junior Member
33
01-29-2022, 01:50 PM
#8
My i7-7700 runs at 4GHz turbo on the ASUS PRIME Z270-P board, but only increases speed when needed—typically staying around 1.25GHz during light tasks like typing.
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TheDragoclaw
01-29-2022, 01:50 PM #8

My i7-7700 runs at 4GHz turbo on the ASUS PRIME Z270-P board, but only increases speed when needed—typically staying around 1.25GHz during light tasks like typing.

X
57
01-29-2022, 10:24 PM
#9
Turbo works on one core when the workload and temperature allow.
The value is 3.8.
Alternatively, using an i5-3570K could yield 4.2 across all cores with a good cooler.
It's reasonable to consider a K suffix processor if your motherboard supports overclocking.
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XxExotic_PvPxX
01-29-2022, 10:24 PM #9

Turbo works on one core when the workload and temperature allow.
The value is 3.8.
Alternatively, using an i5-3570K could yield 4.2 across all cores with a good cooler.
It's reasonable to consider a K suffix processor if your motherboard supports overclocking.

S
Shade2OGamer
Junior Member
39
02-01-2022, 01:58 AM
#10
Multicore enhancement refers to adjusting settings to utilize all available cores, not disabling them. It aims to achieve optimal performance across the remaining cores, not just boosting single-core speed. If your games run worse in this mode, it may indicate a configuration issue.
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Shade2OGamer
02-01-2022, 01:58 AM #10

Multicore enhancement refers to adjusting settings to utilize all available cores, not disabling them. It aims to achieve optimal performance across the remaining cores, not just boosting single-core speed. If your games run worse in this mode, it may indicate a configuration issue.

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