F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Freezing occurs during stress testing of overclocking.

Freezing occurs during stress testing of overclocking.

Freezing occurs during stress testing of overclocking.

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gdog557
Member
218
09-03-2025, 12:36 AM
#1
I increased my CPU speed to 4.2ghz at 1.4 volts but it would freeze during stress tests with prime95. Adjusting the voltage didn’t help, so I enabled auto-voltage and still faced the issue. I’ve observed that after an hour, the CPU temperature consistently reaches 82 degrees. Despite this, I can still stream and play games for hours.
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gdog557
09-03-2025, 12:36 AM #1

I increased my CPU speed to 4.2ghz at 1.4 volts but it would freeze during stress tests with prime95. Adjusting the voltage didn’t help, so I enabled auto-voltage and still faced the issue. I’ve observed that after an hour, the CPU temperature consistently reaches 82 degrees. Despite this, I can still stream and play games for hours.

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tntruner
Junior Member
13
09-04-2025, 02:33 AM
#2
Hi, freezing refers to low voltage, also 1.4 is quite high, consider settling for 4.1ghz on your CPU. Prime95 or any other stress testing software puts your CPU under excessive load for stability and temperature checks, which you can't achieve with regular daily tasks.
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tntruner
09-04-2025, 02:33 AM #2

Hi, freezing refers to low voltage, also 1.4 is quite high, consider settling for 4.1ghz on your CPU. Prime95 or any other stress testing software puts your CPU under excessive load for stability and temperature checks, which you can't achieve with regular daily tasks.

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Du_Jus_Oasis
Member
170
09-04-2025, 11:16 AM
#3
Degradation is genuine and can quickly become frustrating if you push too much. I've destroyed GPUs before because I tried to force a bit more performance. The expense of new components was what kept me from overclocking until I finally assembled a system to upgrade my old one.

This time, I went for a more cautious strategy, ensuring my Ryzen 7 1700 stays under AMD's daily usage guideline of 1.35v (3.9GHz/1.344v). They also warn that performance may drop noticeably around 1.45v. Running at 300 MHz isn't justified by the added heat and strain, in my opinion.
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Du_Jus_Oasis
09-04-2025, 11:16 AM #3

Degradation is genuine and can quickly become frustrating if you push too much. I've destroyed GPUs before because I tried to force a bit more performance. The expense of new components was what kept me from overclocking until I finally assembled a system to upgrade my old one.

This time, I went for a more cautious strategy, ensuring my Ryzen 7 1700 stays under AMD's daily usage guideline of 1.35v (3.9GHz/1.344v). They also warn that performance may drop noticeably around 1.45v. Running at 300 MHz isn't justified by the added heat and strain, in my opinion.

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Root_Winder
Junior Member
35
09-04-2025, 02:14 PM
#4
The problem was with a faulty CPU cooler, so I switched to another one and it resolved the issue.
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Root_Winder
09-04-2025, 02:14 PM #4

The problem was with a faulty CPU cooler, so I switched to another one and it resolved the issue.

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RyanH2004
Junior Member
6
09-06-2025, 03:48 PM
#5
The problem was with a faulty CPU cooler, so I switched to another one and it resolved the issue. Which cooler did you use?
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RyanH2004
09-06-2025, 03:48 PM #5

The problem was with a faulty CPU cooler, so I switched to another one and it resolved the issue. Which cooler did you use?