F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Is Ryzen Master accurate?

Is Ryzen Master accurate?

Is Ryzen Master accurate?

J
jamin8or
Junior Member
16
12-19-2016, 11:43 PM
#1
I attempted to overclock my Ryzen 3 1200 and after stability tests, Ryzen Master reports a 70°C temperature in AIDA64, while HWMonitor only displays 59°C. Is Ryzen Master functioning correctly, or are the other two programs inaccurate?
J
jamin8or
12-19-2016, 11:43 PM #1

I attempted to overclock my Ryzen 3 1200 and after stability tests, Ryzen Master reports a 70°C temperature in AIDA64, while HWMonitor only displays 59°C. Is Ryzen Master functioning correctly, or are the other two programs inaccurate?

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WaterLily2003
Senior Member
648
12-21-2016, 09:08 AM
#2
I would prefer to rely on the AMD app for checking the health of my Ryzen setup (with three systems), rather than using generic tools.
Did you collect all these measurements simultaneously, in identical settings? If yes, the monitoring software might actually cause conflicts.
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WaterLily2003
12-21-2016, 09:08 AM #2

I would prefer to rely on the AMD app for checking the health of my Ryzen setup (with three systems), rather than using generic tools.
Did you collect all these measurements simultaneously, in identical settings? If yes, the monitoring software might actually cause conflicts.

J
Jewel24
Junior Member
24
12-24-2016, 11:25 PM
#3
I've also attempted cinebench with ryzen master as the temp monitor, but it still spikes to 70°C. For reference, my stress test temperatures only reach 50°C, and I only pushed my processor to 3.7.
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Jewel24
12-24-2016, 11:25 PM #3

I've also attempted cinebench with ryzen master as the temp monitor, but it still spikes to 70°C. For reference, my stress test temperatures only reach 50°C, and I only pushed my processor to 3.7.

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Frogimouse
Member
217
12-24-2016, 11:45 PM
#4
50c is insufficient for a high-performance Ryzen under stress, such as during gaming or testing. This value doesn't hold up unless the environment is extremely cold. The measurement isn't trustworthy.
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Frogimouse
12-24-2016, 11:45 PM #4

50c is insufficient for a high-performance Ryzen under stress, such as during gaming or testing. This value doesn't hold up unless the environment is extremely cold. The measurement isn't trustworthy.

X
XAcmedX
Member
60
12-31-2016, 05:24 AM
#5
50c is insufficient for an overclocked Ryzen when under stress (such as gaming or benchmarking), unless the environment is extremely cold. That value isn't trustworthy. I discovered the issue was the 4.1 update in my BIOS, so after installing the 3.3 version, all three programs now display identical temperature readings. Thanks.
X
XAcmedX
12-31-2016, 05:24 AM #5

50c is insufficient for an overclocked Ryzen when under stress (such as gaming or benchmarking), unless the environment is extremely cold. That value isn't trustworthy. I discovered the issue was the 4.1 update in my BIOS, so after installing the 3.3 version, all three programs now display identical temperature readings. Thanks.

C
Catylan
Junior Member
6
12-31-2016, 07:25 AM
#6
The question asks about performance levels and the specific make/model of the motherboard.
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Catylan
12-31-2016, 07:25 AM #6

The question asks about performance levels and the specific make/model of the motherboard.

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NerdTrooper
Member
82
01-01-2017, 01:00 AM
#7
The question about the higher or lower setting and the specific model is also asked. The user mentions reinstalling a lower version and confirms the motherboard is an ASRock A550M Pro 4.
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NerdTrooper
01-01-2017, 01:00 AM #7

The question about the higher or lower setting and the specific model is also asked. The user mentions reinstalling a lower version and confirms the motherboard is an ASRock A550M Pro 4.