F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Did excessively overclocking my CPU affect the GPU?

Did excessively overclocking my CPU affect the GPU?

Did excessively overclocking my CPU affect the GPU?

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L
66
01-02-2022, 10:24 PM
#1
I had a previous 2600k build that I managed to upgrade recently, and I chose to push it overclock to check its limits after getting a hyper 212 evo. It was stable at around 4.5ghz with a little over 1.28v on air – quite impressive!
Now, I wanted to test further overclocking through MSI Afterburner. When I tried, my screen displayed white blocky patterns everywhere and it froze, turning black before attempting recovery. I had to restart it by power cycling the device in Windows, which showed a message saying "Radeon Wattman recovered from a serious error and restored to defaults."
This made me nervous about trying it again, as I wasn’t sure if my overclocking had damaged the GPU or if there was an issue with the PCIe slot. Should I try fixing it myself or should I just leave it alone?
L
leleinator3000
01-02-2022, 10:24 PM #1

I had a previous 2600k build that I managed to upgrade recently, and I chose to push it overclock to check its limits after getting a hyper 212 evo. It was stable at around 4.5ghz with a little over 1.28v on air – quite impressive!
Now, I wanted to test further overclocking through MSI Afterburner. When I tried, my screen displayed white blocky patterns everywhere and it froze, turning black before attempting recovery. I had to restart it by power cycling the device in Windows, which showed a message saying "Radeon Wattman recovered from a serious error and restored to defaults."
This made me nervous about trying it again, as I wasn’t sure if my overclocking had damaged the GPU or if there was an issue with the PCIe slot. Should I try fixing it myself or should I just leave it alone?

M
Midoringow
Member
53
01-02-2022, 11:24 PM
#2
The 1400 core and 2000 memory specs aren't a mild overclock for any GPU; those are extreme overclocks. Unless you meant 140/200, that's a bit more reasonable. It would be wise to watch some tutorials on GPU overclocking. Usually, you should adjust one setting at a time. Start with the core around 50 MHz until it stalls or crashes, then lower it back to the last stable setting. Repeat for memory. It's a gradual process. You might also need to increase voltage later.
M
Midoringow
01-02-2022, 11:24 PM #2

The 1400 core and 2000 memory specs aren't a mild overclock for any GPU; those are extreme overclocks. Unless you meant 140/200, that's a bit more reasonable. It would be wise to watch some tutorials on GPU overclocking. Usually, you should adjust one setting at a time. Start with the core around 50 MHz until it stalls or crashes, then lower it back to the last stable setting. Repeat for memory. It's a gradual process. You might also need to increase voltage later.

N
nina3313
Member
70
01-17-2022, 10:38 PM
#3
If everything returns to normal, you should be okay. Keep your distance.
N
nina3313
01-17-2022, 10:38 PM #3

If everything returns to normal, you should be okay. Keep your distance.

H
Hynelhu
Member
114
01-18-2022, 12:40 AM
#4
It seems the issue might be connected to software. I’m sure you didn’t make a mistake with your GPU.
H
Hynelhu
01-18-2022, 12:40 AM #4

It seems the issue might be connected to software. I’m sure you didn’t make a mistake with your GPU.

4
476ms
Member
203
01-18-2022, 06:15 AM
#5
It's likely you pushed the GPU too far, and no harm should have occurred if everything functioned normally before.
4
476ms
01-18-2022, 06:15 AM #5

It's likely you pushed the GPU too far, and no harm should have occurred if everything functioned normally before.

F
Fergy04
Member
152
01-19-2022, 09:37 AM
#6
Running at 1400MHz on the core clock and 2000 on memory isn't a huge overclock for a 570.
F
Fergy04
01-19-2022, 09:37 AM #6

Running at 1400MHz on the core clock and 2000 on memory isn't a huge overclock for a 570.

G
Gosheyss
Junior Member
1
01-19-2022, 04:48 PM
#7
It relies on several key points. Your PSU may not have delivered sufficient power, or your GPU could have missed the silicon draw.
G
Gosheyss
01-19-2022, 04:48 PM #7

It relies on several key points. Your PSU may not have delivered sufficient power, or your GPU could have missed the silicon draw.

A
Anden2202
Member
55
01-19-2022, 11:59 PM
#8
Really? A 650w power supply isn't sufficient for a 2600k and an RX 570? Also, it only worked when I adjusted the sliders in afterburner at core clock 1400 and memory 2000, then clicked the check mark—no load or anything else because it would freeze. Sorry if I seem rude, but I'm trying to figure out whether the issue is software or hardware-related so I can't trigger it again.
A
Anden2202
01-19-2022, 11:59 PM #8

Really? A 650w power supply isn't sufficient for a 2600k and an RX 570? Also, it only worked when I adjusted the sliders in afterburner at core clock 1400 and memory 2000, then clicked the check mark—no load or anything else because it would freeze. Sorry if I seem rude, but I'm trying to figure out whether the issue is software or hardware-related so I can't trigger it again.

V
VebbiHD
Member
209
01-20-2022, 12:59 AM
#9
The wattage isn't the concern, it's the quality of PSU. Corsair CX PSU are decent, but not the greatest for overclocking.
V
VebbiHD
01-20-2022, 12:59 AM #9

The wattage isn't the concern, it's the quality of PSU. Corsair CX PSU are decent, but not the greatest for overclocking.

S
soren550
Member
51
01-20-2022, 06:57 AM
#10
The 1400 core and 2000 memory specs aren't a mild overclock for any GPU; those are extreme overclocks. Unless you meant 140/200, that's a bit more reasonable. It would be wise to watch some tutorials on GPU overclocking. Usually, you should adjust one setting at a time. Start with the core around 50 MHz until it stalls or crashes, then lower it back to the last stable setting. Repeat for memory. It's a gradual process. You might also need to increase voltage later.
S
soren550
01-20-2022, 06:57 AM #10

The 1400 core and 2000 memory specs aren't a mild overclock for any GPU; those are extreme overclocks. Unless you meant 140/200, that's a bit more reasonable. It would be wise to watch some tutorials on GPU overclocking. Usually, you should adjust one setting at a time. Start with the core around 50 MHz until it stalls or crashes, then lower it back to the last stable setting. Repeat for memory. It's a gradual process. You might also need to increase voltage later.

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