F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Do you experience stuttering after overclocking your CPU?

Do you experience stuttering after overclocking your CPU?

Do you experience stuttering after overclocking your CPU?

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Candy_737
Senior Member
254
05-02-2018, 07:23 PM
#1
Hi, I'm experiencing stuttering and lag when opening applications on my Ryzen 5 2400G running at 3.9 GHz and 1.344 V after overclocking. The issue started recently, and it wasn't present before. I've checked my GPU settings too, but no performance drops have been observed. The stutters seem to be gradual rather than sudden, possibly linked to fullscreen game optimization.

PC Specs:
Motherboard: Msi B450 Pro Carbon AC
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 2400G
GPU: PowerColor Radeon Rx 570
RAM: G.Skill TridentZ 3200mhz
GPU: EVGA 450W
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Candy_737
05-02-2018, 07:23 PM #1

Hi, I'm experiencing stuttering and lag when opening applications on my Ryzen 5 2400G running at 3.9 GHz and 1.344 V after overclocking. The issue started recently, and it wasn't present before. I've checked my GPU settings too, but no performance drops have been observed. The stutters seem to be gradual rather than sudden, possibly linked to fullscreen game optimization.

PC Specs:
Motherboard: Msi B450 Pro Carbon AC
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 2400G
GPU: PowerColor Radeon Rx 570
RAM: G.Skill TridentZ 3200mhz
GPU: EVGA 450W

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96
05-03-2018, 07:22 PM
#2
Simple method to verify CPU overclock status. Open BIOS, save the current configuration. After that, apply Failsafe Defaults. You may need to re-enable XMP. Check if this affects performance when the CPU runs at normal speeds. If not, restore the saved profile to return to your original overclock settings. It's wise to keep at least one default profile, with XMP active and unnecessary features disabled. I disable energy-saving options, switch to Expert mode, and avoid boot screen graphics. Usually I maintain multiple overclock profiles for RAM and CPU.
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VibrationArrow
05-03-2018, 07:22 PM #2

Simple method to verify CPU overclock status. Open BIOS, save the current configuration. After that, apply Failsafe Defaults. You may need to re-enable XMP. Check if this affects performance when the CPU runs at normal speeds. If not, restore the saved profile to return to your original overclock settings. It's wise to keep at least one default profile, with XMP active and unnecessary features disabled. I disable energy-saving options, switch to Expert mode, and avoid boot screen graphics. Usually I maintain multiple overclock profiles for RAM and CPU.

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seeker07
Senior Member
349
05-03-2018, 08:06 PM
#3
what are your overclock configurations? there could be a timing mismatch.
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seeker07
05-03-2018, 08:06 PM #3

what are your overclock configurations? there could be a timing mismatch.

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207
05-04-2018, 05:24 PM
#4
My CPU runs at 3.9GHz with a voltage of 1.334V, while my GPU operates at 1450Mhz and the memory clock stands at 1950Mhz (I haven't adjusted the voltage).
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ToastaStroodel
05-04-2018, 05:24 PM #4

My CPU runs at 3.9GHz with a voltage of 1.334V, while my GPU operates at 1450Mhz and the memory clock stands at 1950Mhz (I haven't adjusted the voltage).

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scotty5002
Junior Member
3
05-05-2018, 03:51 AM
#5
Sure, I'll proceed with that. Also, I haven't enabled any XMP Profile because I'm unsure if my RAM supports it.
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scotty5002
05-05-2018, 03:51 AM #5

Sure, I'll proceed with that. Also, I haven't enabled any XMP Profile because I'm unsure if my RAM supports it.