Casual overclocking with Corsair versus a 600-watt PSU comparison
Casual overclocking with Corsair versus a 600-watt PSU comparison
Hey there. That isn't the top PSU from Corsair, but it's still a solid choice with a robust 12V rail. You'll be able to push it to higher speeds. You'll know you've hit your limit when you notice fans slowing down at higher loads or during system shutdowns.
Hey there. That isn't the top PSU from Corsair, but it's still a solid choice with a robust 12V rail. You'll be able to push it to higher speeds. You'll know you've hit your limit when you notice the fans slowing down at higher loads or during system shutdowns.
The mastererr clarifies it's not the top PSU from Corsair, but still a solid choice with a robust 12V rail. You'll be able to overclock it. You'll know when you hit your power limit by hearing fans slow down at higher loads or during shutdown.
The requirements state that you must remain stable in prime 95 or the temperatures and voltages must stay within the manufacturer's safe limits. These are your sole constraints. Thank you very much!
VS is the poorest option in the Corsair selection, I wouldn't go overclocking with it or a CX. If I wanted to raise the GPU frequency slightly, would it still be problematic?
While the vs is a mediocre quality unit , I'd argue you have so much 12v headroom there is room for some overclocking.
Hiwever
1. You can't overclock the CPU on a b85 board.
2. The zotac card has very strict power limits (110%) & there is very very little to be gained from overclocking anyway.