F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Do you want to increase your CPU's performance?

Do you want to increase your CPU's performance?

Do you want to increase your CPU's performance?

A
Ax_besf
Junior Member
28
07-23-2016, 09:02 AM
#1
Hello everyone,
I wanted to check if I could increase the clock speed of my CPU a bit. I know it won't be huge or maybe not at all, but I'm not sure. My setup is an i5 2400 with GTX 1050, 2GB RAM and 4GB RAM, and I have an HP Compaq 6200 Pro Microtower.
The main question is... can I overclock my CPU? Is it even possible on this system?
Please let me know if you have any additional information.
Thank you all!
A
Ax_besf
07-23-2016, 09:02 AM #1

Hello everyone,
I wanted to check if I could increase the clock speed of my CPU a bit. I know it won't be huge or maybe not at all, but I'm not sure. My setup is an i5 2400 with GTX 1050, 2GB RAM and 4GB RAM, and I have an HP Compaq 6200 Pro Microtower.
The main question is... can I overclock my CPU? Is it even possible on this system?
Please let me know if you have any additional information.
Thank you all!

P
PrivateNunez
Member
50
07-23-2016, 04:53 PM
#2
You have a locked CPU, so for all intents and purposes, no, there is no realistic way to overclock your CPU reliably. Not in a way that won't have a significant probability of adversely affecting the rest of the hardware, since there is no unlocked multiplier on that CPU. Besides which, the stock cooling you likely have would in no way be sufficient for overclocking even if it was feasible.
P
PrivateNunez
07-23-2016, 04:53 PM #2

You have a locked CPU, so for all intents and purposes, no, there is no realistic way to overclock your CPU reliably. Not in a way that won't have a significant probability of adversely affecting the rest of the hardware, since there is no unlocked multiplier on that CPU. Besides which, the stock cooling you likely have would in no way be sufficient for overclocking even if it was feasible.

B
Birdy2014
Junior Member
13
07-25-2016, 10:03 AM
#3
You have a locked CPU, so for all intents and purposes, no, there is no realistic way to overclock your CPU reliably. Not in a way that won't have a significant probability of adversely affecting the rest of the hardware, since there is no unlocked multiplier on that CPU. Besides which, the stock cooling you likely have would in no way be sufficient for overclocking even if it was feasible.
B
Birdy2014
07-25-2016, 10:03 AM #3

You have a locked CPU, so for all intents and purposes, no, there is no realistic way to overclock your CPU reliably. Not in a way that won't have a significant probability of adversely affecting the rest of the hardware, since there is no unlocked multiplier on that CPU. Besides which, the stock cooling you likely have would in no way be sufficient for overclocking even if it was feasible.

X
xanderzone317
Posting Freak
957
07-30-2016, 05:59 AM
#4
I understand it was possible on older pre-Haswell (4th gen) systems before Intel fixed it in the software, but on an older prebuilt unit it’s probably not workable. Verify if the BCLK or base clock is locked in the BIOS. If it is locked, there’s nothing you can do. If it isn’t, you won’t gain much benefit; adjusting BCLK OC is quite delicate. BCLK influences core, cache, and memory speeds simultaneously. Raising it beyond 3 MHz—even a small increase—can cause instability (about 3 MHz is a significant jump from the default). Also, consider cooling: a standard cooler won’t help.
X
xanderzone317
07-30-2016, 05:59 AM #4

I understand it was possible on older pre-Haswell (4th gen) systems before Intel fixed it in the software, but on an older prebuilt unit it’s probably not workable. Verify if the BCLK or base clock is locked in the BIOS. If it is locked, there’s nothing you can do. If it isn’t, you won’t gain much benefit; adjusting BCLK OC is quite delicate. BCLK influences core, cache, and memory speeds simultaneously. Raising it beyond 3 MHz—even a small increase—can cause instability (about 3 MHz is a significant jump from the default). Also, consider cooling: a standard cooler won’t help.

M
Madthunder2t3
Member
195
08-06-2016, 09:31 AM
#5
And that's precisely why I emphasized how it negatively impacts the rest of the equipment. It's simply not worth the effort anymore.
M
Madthunder2t3
08-06-2016, 09:31 AM #5

And that's precisely why I emphasized how it negatively impacts the rest of the equipment. It's simply not worth the effort anymore.

C
c_x_y
Member
227
08-10-2016, 09:37 AM
#6
Thank you for your message. I understand the situation clearly. I'm facing some slow modules, specifically from a Lenovo C2D, with specs like 8500F and 1067MHz in Task Manager. Can I really try to overclock the RAM?
C
c_x_y
08-10-2016, 09:37 AM #6

Thank you for your message. I understand the situation clearly. I'm facing some slow modules, specifically from a Lenovo C2D, with specs like 8500F and 1067MHz in Task Manager. Can I really try to overclock the RAM?

M
MajaPaulina
Member
202
08-10-2016, 10:51 AM
#7
BCLK OC. Otherwise, negative.
M
MajaPaulina
08-10-2016, 10:51 AM #7

BCLK OC. Otherwise, negative.

P
Private_HAWK
Member
132
08-17-2016, 03:41 AM
#8
Nope.
P
Private_HAWK
08-17-2016, 03:41 AM #8

Nope.

H
hcmurillo
Junior Member
14
08-19-2016, 01:44 PM
#9
Sorry for my delayed response...
I previously had an older system where I successfully boosted my Dell OptiPlex 755 to 2.92GHz using q6600 with setfsb, and it worked well for a long time (over a year).
Now I’m curious—can I achieve similar results with an i5 using any software?
H
hcmurillo
08-19-2016, 01:44 PM #9

Sorry for my delayed response...
I previously had an older system where I successfully boosted my Dell OptiPlex 755 to 2.92GHz using q6600 with setfsb, and it worked well for a long time (over a year).
Now I’m curious—can I achieve similar results with an i5 using any software?