Check if the CPU is faulty or if the motherboard needs attention.
Check if the CPU is faulty or if the motherboard needs attention.
Yesterday I experimented with my memory speed by increasing the BCLK from 100 to 132, keeping other multipliers similar. The result was a drop in latency from about 68 to 46, which improved my game performance. While playing BF2042, my PC shut down completely without any blue screen or error messages, only powering off a few times during startup. After a while it failed to reach BIOS and turned off when the post lights appeared. I reset the BIOS by unplugging everything and tried a RAM stick, but the issue persisted. I now suspect that the BCLK overclock might affect voltage levels and increase the risk of damage. Anyone have suggestions on how to determine if the CPU or motherboard is faulty? Thanks!
With higher voltage, damage to the CPU is more probable. Memory overclocking might have affected the memory controller inside the CPU package.
On current systems, boosting performance is limited to small increments in MHz, not major jumps. It’s no longer possible to easily increase it by 30% like in the past. Diagnosing issues becomes difficult without a standardized set of components to test.
Try testing your friend's CPU could also reset the system configuration, allowing you to restart it. Once you agree with the other CPU, check if your own CPU works properly again. Hope it goes smoothly!
Thanks for the reminder, I’ll bring my 4080 and ram kit to my friends’ PCs and double-check everything works.
Not applicable beyond the 6th generation. The PCIe clocks are fully independent of CPU, memory, and cache BCLK speeds. With proper configuration, you can boot at a higher BCLK without major problems. Setting it above 110 isn't necessary and poses little risk for PCIe cards. Most modern systems handle 132MHz BCLK without trouble when using non-K overclocking. Voltage boosts usually come from the CPU itself, not external components. If something failed, the issue is likely with the CPU. Have you tried using the safe boot option to reset the BIOS and adjust BCLK?
It's nice to hear the other side of my PC is working. I actually managed that a few times after it powered off, but being a bit of a jokester I switched the “bclk aware voltage” to manual to try and prevent issues with my CPU. After resetting the BIOS, it only showed one message—“updating system LEDs”—then restarted. It’s stuck in a shutdown cycle, switching between two BIOS settings on my motherboard, and resetting them doesn’t seem to help.