F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Check if the Cooler Master Hyper T2 supports overclocking.

Check if the Cooler Master Hyper T2 supports overclocking.

Check if the Cooler Master Hyper T2 supports overclocking.

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cihatman
Junior Member
13
05-19-2016, 12:37 PM
#11
I'm using the identical cooler for my FX-6300 at 4.2 Ghz, and it consistently stays under 60 degrees even when under stress, which suggests an issue with either the cooler or the processor.
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cihatman
05-19-2016, 12:37 PM #11

I'm using the identical cooler for my FX-6300 at 4.2 Ghz, and it consistently stays under 60 degrees even when under stress, which suggests an issue with either the cooler or the processor.

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Coconout
Junior Member
29
05-19-2016, 06:54 PM
#12
There is no problem with the cooler or anything, stress tests are pushing the CPU to it's limit so it will heat up a lot no matter what. That cooler is fine, my 4690k with stock cooler hits 100 degrees on stress, I know this is terrible, but you should be fine.
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Coconout
05-19-2016, 06:54 PM #12

There is no problem with the cooler or anything, stress tests are pushing the CPU to it's limit so it will heat up a lot no matter what. That cooler is fine, my 4690k with stock cooler hits 100 degrees on stress, I know this is terrible, but you should be fine.

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jerrychok
Junior Member
24
05-19-2016, 07:16 PM
#13
I recently purchased the i5 4690k and performed some overclocking to 4.0GHz using the CM Hyper T2. During stress tests with Prime95 and IntelBurnTest, the core temperatures reached extremely high levels (around 80-96 degrees Celsius). I'm trying to figure out if the CPU cooler or the overclock was the main issue. Thanks!

I also have a CM Hyper T2 and the i5 4690K OC'd to 4.5GHz with a 45 CPU multiplier. When stress testing with Prime95 (using small FFTs for maximum thermal load), my temperatures stayed around 76 degrees Celsius. My Vcore voltage is set at 1.170, and the cache ratio multiplier is at 43. If the Vcore were around 1.3 volts or lower, I'd expect temperatures in the 90s under load. Since the automatic overclocking on my motherboard forced higher voltages than desired, I had to adjust manually.

EDIT: I also have five case fans—two front, two back, and one side.
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jerrychok
05-19-2016, 07:16 PM #13

I recently purchased the i5 4690k and performed some overclocking to 4.0GHz using the CM Hyper T2. During stress tests with Prime95 and IntelBurnTest, the core temperatures reached extremely high levels (around 80-96 degrees Celsius). I'm trying to figure out if the CPU cooler or the overclock was the main issue. Thanks!

I also have a CM Hyper T2 and the i5 4690K OC'd to 4.5GHz with a 45 CPU multiplier. When stress testing with Prime95 (using small FFTs for maximum thermal load), my temperatures stayed around 76 degrees Celsius. My Vcore voltage is set at 1.170, and the cache ratio multiplier is at 43. If the Vcore were around 1.3 volts or lower, I'd expect temperatures in the 90s under load. Since the automatic overclocking on my motherboard forced higher voltages than desired, I had to adjust manually.

EDIT: I also have five case fans—two front, two back, and one side.

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JRiley
Member
114
05-20-2016, 01:54 AM
#14
I know this is an old posting but i got to ask when you placed your cooler for the first time did you take off the protective plastic seal on the bottom because some people makes that mistake which does result to overheating.
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JRiley
05-20-2016, 01:54 AM #14

I know this is an old posting but i got to ask when you placed your cooler for the first time did you take off the protective plastic seal on the bottom because some people makes that mistake which does result to overheating.

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