F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking I face a massive 3770k overclocking problem and require a lot of assistance.

I face a massive 3770k overclocking problem and require a lot of assistance.

I face a massive 3770k overclocking problem and require a lot of assistance.

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Lips
Senior Member
624
07-22-2024, 12:20 PM
#11
these problematic moments were recorded sequentially from 16 minutes up to about 24 minutes, with the final photo captured when the screen became fully unresponsive at 24 minutes.
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Lips
07-22-2024, 12:20 PM #11

these problematic moments were recorded sequentially from 16 minutes up to about 24 minutes, with the final photo captured when the screen became fully unresponsive at 24 minutes.

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Pieftw247
Member
201
07-29-2024, 01:09 PM
#12
Did the lowest MHz decrease occur during the bench test? Check the performance limits section. Was any of this activated?
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Pieftw247
07-29-2024, 01:09 PM #12

Did the lowest MHz decrease occur during the bench test? Check the performance limits section. Was any of this activated?

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FireFalconII
Member
85
08-04-2024, 12:45 AM
#13
the minimum values stay almost unchanged, keeping 3691.6mhz across all cores. the system works well for the first four minutes, but after that the cursor slows and the screen flickers. the GPU doesn’t appear to overheat much at around 55 degrees, though i saw a log entry mentioning a freeze with the word "handbreak." some messages appeared below it, which is helpful. i performed another CMOS reset and stayed on the recommended settings, making sure my HDMI cable was properly connected. however, i still don’t understand what’s causing the freezing. additionally, i checked the Vega temperature reaching up to 80 degrees at the GPU hotspot, but it’s currently around 70 degrees. i’m not sure what’s leading to the freeze. a complete crash followed by a restart happened about ten minutes into the stress test.
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FireFalconII
08-04-2024, 12:45 AM #13

the minimum values stay almost unchanged, keeping 3691.6mhz across all cores. the system works well for the first four minutes, but after that the cursor slows and the screen flickers. the GPU doesn’t appear to overheat much at around 55 degrees, though i saw a log entry mentioning a freeze with the word "handbreak." some messages appeared below it, which is helpful. i performed another CMOS reset and stayed on the recommended settings, making sure my HDMI cable was properly connected. however, i still don’t understand what’s causing the freezing. additionally, i checked the Vega temperature reaching up to 80 degrees at the GPU hotspot, but it’s currently around 70 degrees. i’m not sure what’s leading to the freeze. a complete crash followed by a restart happened about ten minutes into the stress test.

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vCaiden
Junior Member
49
08-06-2024, 03:18 AM
#14
the 3770k shows a base clock of 3.9ghz while task manager lists 3.5ghz
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vCaiden
08-06-2024, 03:18 AM #14

the 3770k shows a base clock of 3.9ghz while task manager lists 3.5ghz

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BlueBaery
Member
229
08-06-2024, 04:40 AM
#15
also reduced voltage on cpu to 1.125 and ran a 15-minute stress test without screen issues, no flicker or stutter, minimum frequency dropped to about 75 degrees while temperatures reached up to 75 degrees.
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BlueBaery
08-06-2024, 04:40 AM #15

also reduced voltage on cpu to 1.125 and ran a 15-minute stress test without screen issues, no flicker or stutter, minimum frequency dropped to about 75 degrees while temperatures reached up to 75 degrees.

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goldmoneyman
Member
52
08-13-2024, 04:53 PM
#16
Don't fret about what the task manager is showing—it's not intended for tracking specific frequency details. Make sure you log the frequencies, voltages, and temperatures you observe at stock. Once everything is stable and has passed the stress test, it's time to begin overclocking. Keep going in small steps and focus on one component at a time.
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goldmoneyman
08-13-2024, 04:53 PM #16

Don't fret about what the task manager is showing—it's not intended for tracking specific frequency details. Make sure you log the frequencies, voltages, and temperatures you observe at stock. Once everything is stable and has passed the stress test, it's time to begin overclocking. Keep going in small steps and focus on one component at a time.

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