F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Cometlake 10100 Clock is a timepiece designed for precision and style.

Cometlake 10100 Clock is a timepiece designed for precision and style.

Cometlake 10100 Clock is a timepiece designed for precision and style.

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BritishPing
Member
105
03-09-2016, 02:44 PM
#1
Hello everyone, I recently bought an Intel 10th generation 10100 4-core processor with hyperthreading and am very satisfied. I know Intel says non-K skew CPUs aren't fully unlocked for overclocking, but on my Z490M motherboard you can push the BLCK clock up to 102.9, giving a slight performance boost (reaching around 4.42GHz max). Anything above that won’t let me boot. I’m curious if there are any methods to bypass this non-K CPU overclock detection or if there’s another way to squeeze more speed out of this chip. I truly believe the 10100 has strong potential with high clock speeds, but it just needs the right approach. Thanks for your time.
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BritishPing
03-09-2016, 02:44 PM #1

Hello everyone, I recently bought an Intel 10th generation 10100 4-core processor with hyperthreading and am very satisfied. I know Intel says non-K skew CPUs aren't fully unlocked for overclocking, but on my Z490M motherboard you can push the BLCK clock up to 102.9, giving a slight performance boost (reaching around 4.42GHz max). Anything above that won’t let me boot. I’m curious if there are any methods to bypass this non-K CPU overclock detection or if there’s another way to squeeze more speed out of this chip. I truly believe the 10100 has strong potential with high clock speeds, but it just needs the right approach. Thanks for your time.

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TheBluArtist
Member
179
03-09-2016, 06:37 PM
#2
Is this really a firmware lock? It seems unlikely to be stable beyond now. BCLK isn't just the CPU clock—it affects nearly all components, so adjusting it can cause significant issues.
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TheBluArtist
03-09-2016, 06:37 PM #2

Is this really a firmware lock? It seems unlikely to be stable beyond now. BCLK isn't just the CPU clock—it affects nearly all components, so adjusting it can cause significant issues.

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live77
Member
194
03-16-2016, 04:13 PM
#3
Found details on the site about Intel Core i3-10100 overclocking. The 100th percentile mentioned in the review.
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live77
03-16-2016, 04:13 PM #3

Found details on the site about Intel Core i3-10100 overclocking. The 100th percentile mentioned in the review.

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SharkkYT
Junior Member
2
03-16-2016, 05:44 PM
#4
It's quite odd. However, since Intel designed it, it's unlikely you'll discover an easy workaround, and using a tailored BIOS would raise concerns.
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SharkkYT
03-16-2016, 05:44 PM #4

It's quite odd. However, since Intel designed it, it's unlikely you'll discover an easy workaround, and using a tailored BIOS would raise concerns.

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ItzRicky__
Member
62
03-16-2016, 09:22 PM
#5
Only with inside insight and purposeful changes can anything be achieved.
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ItzRicky__
03-16-2016, 09:22 PM #5

Only with inside insight and purposeful changes can anything be achieved.

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larissa_panda
Junior Member
9
03-17-2016, 12:13 AM
#6
It's clear I grasp profit margins and similar concepts in Intel, but this chip packs a lot more power. I hope eventually someone discovers a way around it.
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larissa_panda
03-17-2016, 12:13 AM #6

It's clear I grasp profit margins and similar concepts in Intel, but this chip packs a lot more power. I hope eventually someone discovers a way around it.

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murderman25
Member
168
03-17-2016, 04:20 AM
#7
Pushing BCLK beyond 100MHz risks HDD damage since it raises the South Bridge frequency bus, and it’s certain to break your Windows installation. The CPU, however, can handle higher speeds if it isn’t tied to the BUS/reference clock. Back then VIA chipsets allowed this approach. You’d need NForce 2 boards to achieve it, as Intel restricts multipliers on non-K chips for optimization. AMD follows the same pattern. I don’t recommend tampering with OS settings—raising the frequency by just 2MHz isn’t worth the chance for most users. That’s my take on the matter. Get a K series chip and you’re good to go!
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murderman25
03-17-2016, 04:20 AM #7

Pushing BCLK beyond 100MHz risks HDD damage since it raises the South Bridge frequency bus, and it’s certain to break your Windows installation. The CPU, however, can handle higher speeds if it isn’t tied to the BUS/reference clock. Back then VIA chipsets allowed this approach. You’d need NForce 2 boards to achieve it, as Intel restricts multipliers on non-K chips for optimization. AMD follows the same pattern. I don’t recommend tampering with OS settings—raising the frequency by just 2MHz isn’t worth the chance for most users. That’s my take on the matter. Get a K series chip and you’re good to go!

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DanFire
Junior Member
39
03-17-2016, 04:39 AM
#8
The primary storage is a 970 EVO drive. It's a trial project, and I'll keep this discussion current if anything changes.
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DanFire
03-17-2016, 04:39 AM #8

The primary storage is a 970 EVO drive. It's a trial project, and I'll keep this discussion current if anything changes.