F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Is there any indication of immediate crashes or black screens following the overclocking of a Ryzen 7 1700?

Is there any indication of immediate crashes or black screens following the overclocking of a Ryzen 7 1700?

Is there any indication of immediate crashes or black screens following the overclocking of a Ryzen 7 1700?

S
Smivverz
Junior Member
3
09-30-2017, 09:33 AM
#1
PC Specifications
Ryzen 7 1700 3ghz base
Gtx 1650
Deepcool ak400
8x2 2666mhz ram
A320MH 6.0 BIOSTAR
ak700W bronze 80 psu
Whenever I attempt to manually adjust my CPU via BIOS, even by small increments, the system becomes unstable—displaying black screen flashes or freezing when launching apps. Any advice would be appreciated.
I've also found that Ryzen Master isn't working and the changes aren't reflected in Task Manager (though it functions briefly in BIOS). My CPU temperature during idle runs is approximately 42-43°C.
S
Smivverz
09-30-2017, 09:33 AM #1

PC Specifications
Ryzen 7 1700 3ghz base
Gtx 1650
Deepcool ak400
8x2 2666mhz ram
A320MH 6.0 BIOSTAR
ak700W bronze 80 psu
Whenever I attempt to manually adjust my CPU via BIOS, even by small increments, the system becomes unstable—displaying black screen flashes or freezing when launching apps. Any advice would be appreciated.
I've also found that Ryzen Master isn't working and the changes aren't reflected in Task Manager (though it functions briefly in BIOS). My CPU temperature during idle runs is approximately 42-43°C.

I
Ipod984
Senior Member
707
09-30-2017, 11:13 AM
#2
Likely due to the age of the bios, please update them.
I
Ipod984
09-30-2017, 11:13 AM #2

Likely due to the age of the bios, please update them.

I
ImDaMan123
Member
68
10-01-2017, 05:21 PM
#3
My bio is up to date according to what I understand. The last change was made in 2022, which is still recent compared to the 1700s.
I
ImDaMan123
10-01-2017, 05:21 PM #3

My bio is up to date according to what I understand. The last change was made in 2022, which is still recent compared to the 1700s.

B
Bendik4TheLife
Junior Member
19
10-01-2017, 10:24 PM
#4
Stop pushing the CPU beyond its limits. The maximum boosts are 3.3/3.4, with 3.3 for one core and 3.2 across all cores.
B
Bendik4TheLife
10-01-2017, 10:24 PM #4

Stop pushing the CPU beyond its limits. The maximum boosts are 3.3/3.4, with 3.3 for one core and 3.2 across all cores.

A
AlpFG
Member
142
10-02-2017, 12:03 AM
#5
I was attempting to increase its speed by a small amount just to start, but it still leads to problems.
My goal for overclocking is to get a 240hz monitor in about a week or so and need only a minor FPS improvement to reach that target. Right now I'm seeing around 160-190 fps on some games.
A
AlpFG
10-02-2017, 12:03 AM #5

I was attempting to increase its speed by a small amount just to start, but it still leads to problems.
My goal for overclocking is to get a 240hz monitor in about a week or so and need only a minor FPS improvement to reach that target. Right now I'm seeing around 160-190 fps on some games.

R
Raidex20
Posting Freak
751
10-02-2017, 06:25 AM
#6
When you are testing, you must also provide a higher voltage and accommodate greater power.
R
Raidex20
10-02-2017, 06:25 AM #6

When you are testing, you must also provide a higher voltage and accommodate greater power.

J
Jyezy
Junior Member
13
10-02-2017, 11:58 AM
#7
How do you increase the CPU speed on an A320 motherboard? They shouldn't be able to. It might actually be adjusting the memory settings instead. The original Ryzen chips had strict requirements for memory overclocking, often needing extensive timing and voltage adjustments even after AGESA/BIOS updates.
J
Jyezy
10-02-2017, 11:58 AM #7

How do you increase the CPU speed on an A320 motherboard? They shouldn't be able to. It might actually be adjusting the memory settings instead. The original Ryzen chips had strict requirements for memory overclocking, often needing extensive timing and voltage adjustments even after AGESA/BIOS updates.

T
Taybaybay
Posting Freak
850
10-04-2017, 02:11 AM
#8
It's better not to push the overclock too much, the A320 chipset is poor, and it's a complete mess. For AM4 overclocking, always pick the X370, X470, or the latest X570 for AM4. With B550, the ASRocK B550 EXTREME4 works well. Just keep in mind you should try higher settings, but I think you won't reach much higher clocks because the chipset is average and the memory controller on first-gen Ryzen was unreliable. You'll need to increase the voltage, suggesting a step by step increase, which is what I do with my old CPU. For overclocking, the memory, CPU, and motherboard are the most critical components.
T
Taybaybay
10-04-2017, 02:11 AM #8

It's better not to push the overclock too much, the A320 chipset is poor, and it's a complete mess. For AM4 overclocking, always pick the X370, X470, or the latest X570 for AM4. With B550, the ASRocK B550 EXTREME4 works well. Just keep in mind you should try higher settings, but I think you won't reach much higher clocks because the chipset is average and the memory controller on first-gen Ryzen was unreliable. You'll need to increase the voltage, suggesting a step by step increase, which is what I do with my old CPU. For overclocking, the memory, CPU, and motherboard are the most critical components.