F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Comparison of Ryzen 3 2200G stock versus overclocked version at 3.9GHz with an RX 570 4GB

Comparison of Ryzen 3 2200G stock versus overclocked version at 3.9GHz with an RX 570 4GB

Comparison of Ryzen 3 2200G stock versus overclocked version at 3.9GHz with an RX 570 4GB

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xAdriLCT
Senior Member
702
12-03-2017, 12:44 PM
#1
Do you see significant variations between stock voltage and the possibility of overclocking to 3.9ghz? Yes, I plan to use this Apu with another quiet graphics card. Is it worth doing so? Since it will require an aftermarket cooler, that’s what I need to consider.
X
xAdriLCT
12-03-2017, 12:44 PM #1

Do you see significant variations between stock voltage and the possibility of overclocking to 3.9ghz? Yes, I plan to use this Apu with another quiet graphics card. Is it worth doing so? Since it will require an aftermarket cooler, that’s what I need to consider.

A
aquadio
Member
138
12-05-2017, 03:02 PM
#2
I wouldn't recommend combining that GPU with that APU right now. Also, overclocking isn't just a simple setting you enter—it requires a complete system setup. Please share your specifications clearly: CPU, motherboard, RAM, SSD/HDD, GPU, PSU, chassis, OS, and whether the latest BIOS update is installed.
A
aquadio
12-05-2017, 03:02 PM #2

I wouldn't recommend combining that GPU with that APU right now. Also, overclocking isn't just a simple setting you enter—it requires a complete system setup. Please share your specifications clearly: CPU, motherboard, RAM, SSD/HDD, GPU, PSU, chassis, OS, and whether the latest BIOS update is installed.

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EthRry
Member
64
12-05-2017, 09:54 PM
#3
Since the 2200 isn't the most demanding Ryzen CPU, adjusting its speed on any motherboard should be manageable—achieving a 3.9 GHz all-core boost would likely require just about any aftermarket cooling solution. The RX570 works well with it.
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EthRry
12-05-2017, 09:54 PM #3

Since the 2200 isn't the most demanding Ryzen CPU, adjusting its speed on any motherboard should be manageable—achieving a 3.9 GHz all-core boost would likely require just about any aftermarket cooling solution. The RX570 works well with it.