F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Hello. I can assist you with the overclocking process.

Hello. I can assist you with the overclocking process.

Hello. I can assist you with the overclocking process.

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Der_Zwieback
Member
148
09-03-2025, 09:28 PM
#1
Make sure you have the most recent BIOS version installed.
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Der_Zwieback
09-03-2025, 09:28 PM #1

Make sure you have the most recent BIOS version installed.

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Tommygirl123
Junior Member
33
09-03-2025, 09:28 PM
#2
I also forgot to note that I had already updated to the latest version yesterday.
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Tommygirl123
09-03-2025, 09:28 PM #2

I also forgot to note that I had already updated to the latest version yesterday.

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_MrDay_
Member
215
09-03-2025, 09:28 PM
#3
What should I do next? Should I stick with the default BIOS settings and simply turn off MCE, set the multiplier to 47, sync all cores, and adjust the vcore voltage to manual or adaptive, starting at 1.25V? Then I can begin thermal and stability testing. What about Turbo—should I disable that feature?
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_MrDay_
09-03-2025, 09:28 PM #3

What should I do next? Should I stick with the default BIOS settings and simply turn off MCE, set the multiplier to 47, sync all cores, and adjust the vcore voltage to manual or adaptive, starting at 1.25V? Then I can begin thermal and stability testing. What about Turbo—should I disable that feature?

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tamemarco
Senior Member
482
09-03-2025, 09:28 PM
#4
So I think everything is configured correctly except MCE on, SVID enabled, and the SVID set to the best case scenario. Maybe adjusting the CPU voltage could help, but I’m not sure how. Currently it’s at 1,293 V at full load. The CPU core voltage is set to auto, and I’ve enabled SVID with the best case setting. Any advice?
Edit: actually, the max voltage of 1,293 V at full load is listed in HWinfo as VID. The real Vcore was higher, around 1.253 volts. As far as I understand, VID is what the CPU requests and Vcore is what it receives? Sounds about right?
So perhaps a lower Vcore would be better for a 4.7GHz all-core speed. The maximum temperature on a single core was 69°C. Everything seems to be functioning normally with no errors in tests. I’ll need to run longer tests since I only ran small benchmarks like prime95, cinebench r20, and Intel xtU, each lasting about 15 minutes.
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tamemarco
09-03-2025, 09:28 PM #4

So I think everything is configured correctly except MCE on, SVID enabled, and the SVID set to the best case scenario. Maybe adjusting the CPU voltage could help, but I’m not sure how. Currently it’s at 1,293 V at full load. The CPU core voltage is set to auto, and I’ve enabled SVID with the best case setting. Any advice?
Edit: actually, the max voltage of 1,293 V at full load is listed in HWinfo as VID. The real Vcore was higher, around 1.253 volts. As far as I understand, VID is what the CPU requests and Vcore is what it receives? Sounds about right?
So perhaps a lower Vcore would be better for a 4.7GHz all-core speed. The maximum temperature on a single core was 69°C. Everything seems to be functioning normally with no errors in tests. I’ll need to run longer tests since I only ran small benchmarks like prime95, cinebench r20, and Intel xtU, each lasting about 15 minutes.

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CMDR_Nova
Junior Member
45
09-03-2025, 09:28 PM
#5
I successfully configured everything, thanks to the overclocking guides on the forum.
😉
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CMDR_Nova
09-03-2025, 09:28 PM #5

I successfully configured everything, thanks to the overclocking guides on the forum.
😉