F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Is it worth it?

Is it worth it?

Is it worth it?

Y
YoungDair
Junior Member
46
02-10-2020, 09:10 PM
#1
I'm not using a high-end gaming setup, but it still works well. I have an RTX 2060 Super and play on a 1080p 144GHz monitor. I'm seeking some guidance.

Overclocking is my first attempt. I managed to reach a 10600k price point quite affordably. Most opinions suggest that with the K version, it would be pointless not to push the limits, right? I own a Noctua nh-d15s and an MSI Gaming Plus. I wasn't too concerned about air cooling initially. The increase from stock to a full 4.8GHz boost has delivered impressive outcomes. Under stress tests like Prime95, OCCT with AVX, etc., I consistently stay below 80 degrees.

Progressing beyond a 48x multiplier is becoming excessively hot and isn't delivering the performance I anticipated. Reaching 4.9 raises temperatures by about 10 degrees, but benchmarks don't show much improvement. Achieving 5.0 might yield better results—potentially surpassing a 10900—but temperatures remain very high, and I experience thermal throttling during AVX-intensive tests within seconds. It's clear I've hit the boundaries of air cooling.

My dilemma is:
A. Continue where I am. The current 4.8 performance is sufficient since I'm already limited by GPU usage. Let it be.
B. Upgrade to a reliable AIO cooler (280 or 360) and try stabilizing at 5.0. It's uncertain when I'll upgrade to a 1440p monitor, but I anticipate needing something more powerful soon.
C. Keep the Noctua fans running and avoid pushing unrealistic stress tests. As long as I can maintain under 80 degrees and play smoothly, it's acceptable. (This seems unlikely, as many online users claim overclocking requires pushing the CPU beyond its limits.)

Any advice would be appreciated. (I'm not interested in replacing everything with Ryzen.)
Y
YoungDair
02-10-2020, 09:10 PM #1

I'm not using a high-end gaming setup, but it still works well. I have an RTX 2060 Super and play on a 1080p 144GHz monitor. I'm seeking some guidance.

Overclocking is my first attempt. I managed to reach a 10600k price point quite affordably. Most opinions suggest that with the K version, it would be pointless not to push the limits, right? I own a Noctua nh-d15s and an MSI Gaming Plus. I wasn't too concerned about air cooling initially. The increase from stock to a full 4.8GHz boost has delivered impressive outcomes. Under stress tests like Prime95, OCCT with AVX, etc., I consistently stay below 80 degrees.

Progressing beyond a 48x multiplier is becoming excessively hot and isn't delivering the performance I anticipated. Reaching 4.9 raises temperatures by about 10 degrees, but benchmarks don't show much improvement. Achieving 5.0 might yield better results—potentially surpassing a 10900—but temperatures remain very high, and I experience thermal throttling during AVX-intensive tests within seconds. It's clear I've hit the boundaries of air cooling.

My dilemma is:
A. Continue where I am. The current 4.8 performance is sufficient since I'm already limited by GPU usage. Let it be.
B. Upgrade to a reliable AIO cooler (280 or 360) and try stabilizing at 5.0. It's uncertain when I'll upgrade to a 1440p monitor, but I anticipate needing something more powerful soon.
C. Keep the Noctua fans running and avoid pushing unrealistic stress tests. As long as I can maintain under 80 degrees and play smoothly, it's acceptable. (This seems unlikely, as many online users claim overclocking requires pushing the CPU beyond its limits.)

Any advice would be appreciated. (I'm not interested in replacing everything with Ryzen.)

R
Redstoner137
Posting Freak
811
02-11-2020, 05:53 PM
#2
Yes, Nvidia and Intel have made overclocking less exciting in recent generations. It's better to keep the default settings, let the high-speed cores handle the workload when they can, and let the remaining parts reach their rated boost. Most of the time, simply improving cooling will work better than trying to overclock manually.
R
Redstoner137
02-11-2020, 05:53 PM #2

Yes, Nvidia and Intel have made overclocking less exciting in recent generations. It's better to keep the default settings, let the high-speed cores handle the workload when they can, and let the remaining parts reach their rated boost. Most of the time, simply improving cooling will work better than trying to overclock manually.

U
united32
Senior Member
433
02-11-2020, 09:11 PM
#3
The difference between 4.8 and 5.0 is just 4%. It would go unnoticed except in comparison points.
U
united32
02-11-2020, 09:11 PM #3

The difference between 4.8 and 5.0 is just 4%. It would go unnoticed except in comparison points.

R
roms12_
Member
158
02-12-2020, 06:18 PM
#4
That's what I'm considering. I've recently encountered the overclocking issue and keep coming across stories about people extracting more performance from the chip.
R
roms12_
02-12-2020, 06:18 PM #4

That's what I'm considering. I've recently encountered the overclocking issue and keep coming across stories about people extracting more performance from the chip.

C
CooKonut
Member
196
02-13-2020, 12:44 AM
#5
Back in the day, overclocking offered real advantages, but nowadays components are mostly pushed to their maximum and serve more as a status symbol now.
C
CooKonut
02-13-2020, 12:44 AM #5

Back in the day, overclocking offered real advantages, but nowadays components are mostly pushed to their maximum and serve more as a status symbol now.

I
IkBenHetBram
Senior Member
735
02-13-2020, 01:03 AM
#6
Visited before, invested a lot of time. It can be enjoyable, but pure performance versus cost overclocking comes with high expenses for the gains achieved.
I
IkBenHetBram
02-13-2020, 01:03 AM #6

Visited before, invested a lot of time. It can be enjoyable, but pure performance versus cost overclocking comes with high expenses for the gains achieved.

S
161
02-28-2020, 02:15 PM
#7
Yes, Nvidia and Intel have made overclocking less exciting in recent generations. It's better to keep the default settings, let the high-speed cores handle the workload when they can, and let the remaining parts reach their rated boost. Most of the time, simply improving cooling will work better than trying to overclock manually.
S
Smart_man_0709
02-28-2020, 02:15 PM #7

Yes, Nvidia and Intel have made overclocking less exciting in recent generations. It's better to keep the default settings, let the high-speed cores handle the workload when they can, and let the remaining parts reach their rated boost. Most of the time, simply improving cooling will work better than trying to overclock manually.

A
AngelSTB
Junior Member
29
03-05-2020, 01:46 AM
#8
Sure thing. Happy to help!
A
AngelSTB
03-05-2020, 01:46 AM #8

Sure thing. Happy to help!