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Is my overclock safe

Is my overclock safe

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Time_TV
Member
102
04-09-2016, 08:26 PM
#1
I've just pushed my i7 4790k beyond its limits for the first time. The CPU looks clean with liquid metal between the dye and IHS. My overclock is stable at 4.7 ghz with a core voltage of 1.250. Turbo boost is on, EIST is active, enhanced turbo is off, and nothing else changed. Task manager shows 5.7 ghz under load, which is higher than the reported frequency. My temps stay around 65 degrees. Is this normal?
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Time_TV
04-09-2016, 08:26 PM #1

I've just pushed my i7 4790k beyond its limits for the first time. The CPU looks clean with liquid metal between the dye and IHS. My overclock is stable at 4.7 ghz with a core voltage of 1.250. Turbo boost is on, EIST is active, enhanced turbo is off, and nothing else changed. Task manager shows 5.7 ghz under load, which is higher than the reported frequency. My temps stay around 65 degrees. Is this normal?

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IAmLiam
Member
193
04-10-2016, 01:51 PM
#2
Continue using the 4.6/1.250V setting, as it might be a restriction of the motherboard. It's worth noting how much overclocking the additional 100-200mhz could be risky today, especially since getting replacement parts would be costly or hard to find due to its age. At 65°C under full load at that voltage, it remains safe and should last for a while.
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IAmLiam
04-10-2016, 01:51 PM #2

Continue using the 4.6/1.250V setting, as it might be a restriction of the motherboard. It's worth noting how much overclocking the additional 100-200mhz could be risky today, especially since getting replacement parts would be costly or hard to find due to its age. At 65°C under full load at that voltage, it remains safe and should last for a while.

I
Ignorance69
Junior Member
40
04-12-2016, 02:24 PM
#3
Ignore the speed task manager reports as they seem inaccurate. Your voltage and temperatures are safe, making it suitable for overclocking or delaying. However, is this a good approach with a 65C through a game or CPU benchmark? If yes, run Prime95 Small FFT with AVX disabled and report the temperature. As long as it stays below 85°C during stress testing (or under 80°C while gaming), everything should be okay.
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Ignorance69
04-12-2016, 02:24 PM #3

Ignore the speed task manager reports as they seem inaccurate. Your voltage and temperatures are safe, making it suitable for overclocking or delaying. However, is this a good approach with a 65C through a game or CPU benchmark? If yes, run Prime95 Small FFT with AVX disabled and report the temperature. As long as it stays below 85°C during stress testing (or under 80°C while gaming), everything should be okay.

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Unoree
Member
161
04-12-2016, 03:47 PM
#4
Thank you for your reply. I should have been more careful with that post. The test I was doing didn't finish. Right now, I'm operating at 4.6 ghz at 1.250 v, about 35 minutes into a prime 95 stress test, with a maximum temperature of 65 degrees.
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Unoree
04-12-2016, 03:47 PM #4

Thank you for your reply. I should have been more careful with that post. The test I was doing didn't finish. Right now, I'm operating at 4.6 ghz at 1.250 v, about 35 minutes into a prime 95 stress test, with a maximum temperature of 65 degrees.

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samigurl0903
Senior Member
603
04-12-2016, 08:13 PM
#5
So 65C at 30 mins is acceptable, but if you're using air cooling you can stop, whereas with an AIO you might want to test for an hour.

You might be able to push it a bit more with overclocking if you wish.
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samigurl0903
04-12-2016, 08:13 PM #5

So 65C at 30 mins is acceptable, but if you're using air cooling you can stop, whereas with an AIO you might want to test for an hour.

You might be able to push it a bit more with overclocking if you wish.

M
malusdominus
Member
82
04-12-2016, 09:18 PM
#6
I cooled using an aio, finished the full hour with a max temp of 65 degrees. It looks stable. I’d try 4.7 ghz or 4.8, but it boots directly to the blue screen.
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malusdominus
04-12-2016, 09:18 PM #6

I cooled using an aio, finished the full hour with a max temp of 65 degrees. It looks stable. I’d try 4.7 ghz or 4.8, but it boots directly to the blue screen.

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Junibug03
Junior Member
36
04-30-2016, 06:05 PM
#7
Increase the voltage, it's possible to reach 1.3V on that CPU.
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Junibug03
04-30-2016, 06:05 PM #7

Increase the voltage, it's possible to reach 1.3V on that CPU.

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SidneyPOA
Member
79
05-05-2016, 05:52 PM
#8
I attempted that but the voltage displayed red in the bios.
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SidneyPOA
05-05-2016, 05:52 PM #8

I attempted that but the voltage displayed red in the bios.

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CyberPhoenix
Member
167
05-06-2016, 02:27 AM
#9
Continue using the 4.6/1.250V setting, as it might be a constraint of the motherboard. It's intriguing to observe how much overclocking the additional 100-200mhz could be risky today, especially since locating replacement parts would be costly or hard to find due to its age. At 65°C under full load at that voltage, it remains safe and should function for a long time.
C
CyberPhoenix
05-06-2016, 02:27 AM #9

Continue using the 4.6/1.250V setting, as it might be a constraint of the motherboard. It's intriguing to observe how much overclocking the additional 100-200mhz could be risky today, especially since locating replacement parts would be costly or hard to find due to its age. At 65°C under full load at that voltage, it remains safe and should function for a long time.

L
Lait_Eau_
Junior Member
4
05-06-2016, 05:01 AM
#10
I hope it's not the motherboard I own a Z97 gaming 5
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Lait_Eau_
05-06-2016, 05:01 AM #10

I hope it's not the motherboard I own a Z97 gaming 5

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