F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Help with boosting 2600x eith B450-f

Help with boosting 2600x eith B450-f

Help with boosting 2600x eith B450-f

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ChloeET
Senior Member
736
03-30-2018, 02:22 AM
#1
Hello, I'm looking to boost my Ryzen 2600x by using a B450-F motherboard. I have two 8GB sticks of 3200GHz PnY Anarchy RAM and a H150i cooler. My current setup is 3200GHz RAM and 4GHz CPU. I'd like to see if I can push things higher if it's safe. I'm just starting with Ryzen and BIOS settings.
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ChloeET
03-30-2018, 02:22 AM #1

Hello, I'm looking to boost my Ryzen 2600x by using a B450-F motherboard. I have two 8GB sticks of 3200GHz PnY Anarchy RAM and a H150i cooler. My current setup is 3200GHz RAM and 4GHz CPU. I'd like to see if I can push things higher if it's safe. I'm just starting with Ryzen and BIOS settings.

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karuu91
Member
140
03-31-2018, 09:27 AM
#2
What VCore voltage are you employing? And what are your CPU temperatures? To give a clearer picture, what PSU do you have and how did you achieve memory at 3200? Have you thought about PBO overclocking? That's an 'X' chip and it should perform well on that board.
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karuu91
03-31-2018, 09:27 AM #2

What VCore voltage are you employing? And what are your CPU temperatures? To give a clearer picture, what PSU do you have and how did you achieve memory at 3200? Have you thought about PBO overclocking? That's an 'X' chip and it should perform well on that board.

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Plox_diegos
Junior Member
33
03-31-2018, 09:37 AM
#3
I own an 850m Corsair PSU and am currently using XMP profiles for my RAM to achieve 3200MHz, but the ratio clock is set to 40 to reach 4GHz. I wonder if it would be better to keep it at 4GHz. I also have a GTX 1080 WindForce OC.
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Plox_diegos
03-31-2018, 09:37 AM #3

I own an 850m Corsair PSU and am currently using XMP profiles for my RAM to achieve 3200MHz, but the ratio clock is set to 40 to reach 4GHz. I wonder if it would be better to keep it at 4GHz. I also have a GTX 1080 WindForce OC.

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iTestify
Member
95
03-31-2018, 04:08 PM
#4
According to AMD, your stops are 1.45v and 75c. If you or the VRM can handle it without voltage drops.
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iTestify
03-31-2018, 04:08 PM #4

According to AMD, your stops are 1.45v and 75c. If you or the VRM can handle it without voltage drops.

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TopazStarz
Junior Member
10
04-06-2018, 05:15 PM
#5
I'm not sure about the vote. However, I can confirm I'm reaching 50c at load right now.
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TopazStarz
04-06-2018, 05:15 PM #5

I'm not sure about the vote. However, I can confirm I'm reaching 50c at load right now.

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BasicllyIPvp
Junior Member
2
04-06-2018, 07:08 PM
#6
HW Info will provide you with a detailed explanation.
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BasicllyIPvp
04-06-2018, 07:08 PM #6

HW Info will provide you with a detailed explanation.

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Bro_craft23
Member
57
04-06-2018, 09:14 PM
#7
It should be sufficient PSU and that's the proper approach for handling RAM at this stage, so everything looks fine there.
If you increased the ratio to 40, you'll also need to raise the voltage to achieve higher performance. However, before adjusting, check CountMike's link for monitoring tools. You must monitor voltage and temperature before increasing voltage.
Unfortunately, it's possible you're still unstable and unaware of it. Have you tested any stress test software to identify this?
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Bro_craft23
04-06-2018, 09:14 PM #7

It should be sufficient PSU and that's the proper approach for handling RAM at this stage, so everything looks fine there.
If you increased the ratio to 40, you'll also need to raise the voltage to achieve higher performance. However, before adjusting, check CountMike's link for monitoring tools. You must monitor voltage and temperature before increasing voltage.
Unfortunately, it's possible you're still unstable and unaware of it. Have you tested any stress test software to identify this?

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lukeaduke99
Junior Member
40
04-07-2018, 04:21 AM
#8
The difference in performance between a stock 2600X with PBO/XFR features and one that's been manually overclocked to 4.2 GHz is usually very small. Setting the frequency to 4 GHz might even slightly lower performance compared to the original model.
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lukeaduke99
04-07-2018, 04:21 AM #8

The difference in performance between a stock 2600X with PBO/XFR features and one that's been manually overclocked to 4.2 GHz is usually very small. Setting the frequency to 4 GHz might even slightly lower performance compared to the original model.

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ClumsySky
Senior Member
526
04-08-2018, 05:45 PM
#9
Yeah, I've run 3D Mark a few times without any problems, and the temperatures stayed around 50 degrees.
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ClumsySky
04-08-2018, 05:45 PM #9

Yeah, I've run 3D Mark a few times without any problems, and the temperatures stayed around 50 degrees.

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united32
Senior Member
433
04-08-2018, 11:04 PM
#10
It seems like you're consistently achieving better results on the 3d section.
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united32
04-08-2018, 11:04 PM #10

It seems like you're consistently achieving better results on the 3d section.

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