F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Is the overclocking of my i7-6700k suitable for the first time?

Is the overclocking of my i7-6700k suitable for the first time?

Is the overclocking of my i7-6700k suitable for the first time?

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wildherb
Junior Member
30
03-07-2016, 04:49 PM
#1
This is my initial overclock attempt. I increased the i7-6700k to 4.5 ghz and set the core voltage to 1.325. Using the CM Hyper 612 V2 air cooler, a stress test showed the temperature reached up to 81°C with fluctuations near 75°C according to MSI Afterburner. During idle browsing it was about 55°C and peaked at 61°C. Are these readings acceptable?

As a beginner in overclocking, I just completed my first build two weeks ago and am worried about damaging my PC.

Edit: Switching to SpeedFan instead of MSI Afterburner, it reported 30-40°C during idle and browsing, reaching a maximum of 64°C under load—noisy difference noticed.
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wildherb
03-07-2016, 04:49 PM #1

This is my initial overclock attempt. I increased the i7-6700k to 4.5 ghz and set the core voltage to 1.325. Using the CM Hyper 612 V2 air cooler, a stress test showed the temperature reached up to 81°C with fluctuations near 75°C according to MSI Afterburner. During idle browsing it was about 55°C and peaked at 61°C. Are these readings acceptable?

As a beginner in overclocking, I just completed my first build two weeks ago and am worried about damaging my PC.

Edit: Switching to SpeedFan instead of MSI Afterburner, it reported 30-40°C during idle and browsing, reaching a maximum of 64°C under load—noisy difference noticed.

T
TruErkki
Junior Member
26
03-07-2016, 08:46 PM
#2
60C or even a little more when under load is completely acceptable.
if the system remains stable, you may keep it exactly as it is.
T
TruErkki
03-07-2016, 08:46 PM #2

60C or even a little more when under load is completely acceptable.
if the system remains stable, you may keep it exactly as it is.

D
dniznemac
Senior Member
555
03-08-2016, 09:25 PM
#3
those temperatures are a bit high for my preference, along with the voltage. Try to reduce the voltage slightly. Check if it remains stable at 4.5GHz; if not, lower the clocks a bit. Temperatures should drop, and you won’t even notice any performance loss if the chip runs 200 or 300 MHz slower.
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dniznemac
03-08-2016, 09:25 PM #3

those temperatures are a bit high for my preference, along with the voltage. Try to reduce the voltage slightly. Check if it remains stable at 4.5GHz; if not, lower the clocks a bit. Temperatures should drop, and you won’t even notice any performance loss if the chip runs 200 or 300 MHz slower.

A
AyyLmaokai
Member
124
03-08-2016, 09:38 PM
#4
dark_globe :
the temperatures are a bit too high and the voltage is also not ideal. Consider reducing the voltage slightly. Check if stability at 4.5GHz is maintained; if not, lower the clocks further. Temperatures should drop, and performance loss will be minimal if the chip runs 200 or 300 MHz slower. Please review the edits in my previous post. Is this acceptable now? Or would you prefer to adjust it even more?
A
AyyLmaokai
03-08-2016, 09:38 PM #4

dark_globe :
the temperatures are a bit too high and the voltage is also not ideal. Consider reducing the voltage slightly. Check if stability at 4.5GHz is maintained; if not, lower the clocks further. Temperatures should drop, and performance loss will be minimal if the chip runs 200 or 300 MHz slower. Please review the edits in my previous post. Is this acceptable now? Or would you prefer to adjust it even more?

V
vincent469
Junior Member
2
03-10-2016, 06:43 PM
#5
60C or even a little more when under load is completely acceptable.
if the system remains stable, you may keep it exactly as it is.
V
vincent469
03-10-2016, 06:43 PM #5

60C or even a little more when under load is completely acceptable.
if the system remains stable, you may keep it exactly as it is.

I
Ilia_Zer0
Member
224
03-11-2016, 01:17 AM
#6
Dark Globe says 60C or slightly higher is okay when under load. If the system stays stable, it's safe to keep it as is. Thanks.
I
Ilia_Zer0
03-11-2016, 01:17 AM #6

Dark Globe says 60C or slightly higher is okay when under load. If the system stays stable, it's safe to keep it as is. Thanks.

P
Pigboy123
Member
61
03-11-2016, 03:21 AM
#7
dark_globe :
60C or even a bit more under load is completely acceptable.
If the system remains stable, you can keep it as it is.
In fact, it wasn't stable at 1.275 until I reduced the core clock to 4.3GHz, but now it appears stable so far.
P
Pigboy123
03-11-2016, 03:21 AM #7

dark_globe :
60C or even a bit more under load is completely acceptable.
If the system remains stable, you can keep it as it is.
In fact, it wasn't stable at 1.275 until I reduced the core clock to 4.3GHz, but now it appears stable so far.

H
HayLove04
Junior Member
20
03-11-2016, 11:34 AM
#8
testing stable at 4.70ghz with settings around 1,350 or 1,370 (keep up to 1,38 max)
working well on 4.7 at 1.35
trying to download the handbrake encoder and encode videos using x265 or x264
if it causes crashes, oc stability is questionable
H
HayLove04
03-11-2016, 11:34 AM #8

testing stable at 4.70ghz with settings around 1,350 or 1,370 (keep up to 1,38 max)
working well on 4.7 at 1.35
trying to download the handbrake encoder and encode videos using x265 or x264
if it causes crashes, oc stability is questionable

C
coopman2
Member
59
03-16-2016, 12:18 PM
#9
It appears haswell supports vcore up to 1.4v. The maximum achievable speed depends on the chip's quality.
Silicon lottery bins chips and offers better models at a higher price.
As of 2/16/16, the percentage range for overclocking at around 1.40v is:
I7-6700K – 4.8% to 18%
I7-6700K – 4.7% to 56%
I7-6700K – 4.6% to 87%
I7-6700K – 4.5% to 100%
C
coopman2
03-16-2016, 12:18 PM #9

It appears haswell supports vcore up to 1.4v. The maximum achievable speed depends on the chip's quality.
Silicon lottery bins chips and offers better models at a higher price.
As of 2/16/16, the percentage range for overclocking at around 1.40v is:
I7-6700K – 4.8% to 18%
I7-6700K – 4.7% to 56%
I7-6700K – 4.6% to 87%
I7-6700K – 4.5% to 100%

J
JorgeSancho
Member
227
03-17-2016, 03:08 PM
#10
geofelt :
It looks like haswell supports a vcore up to 1.4v. The maximum achievable voltage depends on the chip's quality.
Silicon lottery bins chips and offers better options at a higher cost.
As of 2/16/16, the percentage of users who can successfully overclock at around 1.40v is as follows:
I7-6700K – 4.8%
4.7% – 56%
4.6% – 87%
4.5% – 100%
I’d consider it, but I need to run it stock or it would overheat. It reaches 77°C while playing CS on 1.2V and 4.2GHz.
J
JorgeSancho
03-17-2016, 03:08 PM #10

geofelt :
It looks like haswell supports a vcore up to 1.4v. The maximum achievable voltage depends on the chip's quality.
Silicon lottery bins chips and offers better options at a higher cost.
As of 2/16/16, the percentage of users who can successfully overclock at around 1.40v is as follows:
I7-6700K – 4.8%
4.7% – 56%
4.6% – 87%
4.5% – 100%
I’d consider it, but I need to run it stock or it would overheat. It reaches 77°C while playing CS on 1.2V and 4.2GHz.

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