F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Is this typical for an i7 6700k overclock?

Is this typical for an i7 6700k overclock?

Is this typical for an i7 6700k overclock?

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New_air_games
Member
208
01-28-2016, 02:18 AM
#1
I recently increased my 6700k to 4.4gzh with fixed core V at 1.25v and an offset of +0.025. I also enabled c states and disabled EIST via BIOS. At idle, my core voltage reads around 1.248v (which seems accurate for my OC settings), but during Prime 95 stress testing it drops to 1.216v. Can anyone clarify what’s happening?
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New_air_games
01-28-2016, 02:18 AM #1

I recently increased my 6700k to 4.4gzh with fixed core V at 1.25v and an offset of +0.025. I also enabled c states and disabled EIST via BIOS. At idle, my core voltage reads around 1.248v (which seems accurate for my OC settings), but during Prime 95 stress testing it drops to 1.216v. Can anyone clarify what’s happening?

R
108
01-28-2016, 11:38 AM
#2
You should boost your Vcore slightly and see if it works better. Have you checked your current stock bios? The 1.25 value is suitable for Skylake, but with a 4.6ghz at 1.29V and an LLC setup, it might fail due to increased power demands. Give it another try and run a few more cycles until stability returns.
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RainbowGirl328
01-28-2016, 11:38 AM #2

You should boost your Vcore slightly and see if it works better. Have you checked your current stock bios? The 1.25 value is suitable for Skylake, but with a 4.6ghz at 1.29V and an LLC setup, it might fail due to increased power demands. Give it another try and run a few more cycles until stability returns.

J
JaynKay
Member
233
01-28-2016, 12:19 PM
#3
Load Line voltage drop is quite typical. The BIOS should include a Load Line Calibration option, which compensates for the voltage drop caused by the load. If you're not seeing any crashes, it's probably not a major issue.
J
JaynKay
01-28-2016, 12:19 PM #3

Load Line voltage drop is quite typical. The BIOS should include a Load Line Calibration option, which compensates for the voltage drop caused by the load. If you're not seeing any crashes, it's probably not a major issue.

A
Aeonfinis
Junior Member
46
02-04-2016, 09:20 AM
#4
Eximo :
Load Line voltage droop is quite normal. The BIOS should include a Load Line Calibration option, which compensates for the droop caused by load changes.
If you're not seeing crashes, it probably isn't a major issue.
The problem I'm facing is actually crashes—tried Counterstrike Source 1080p at 4.2ghz with identical settings and still experienced crashes.
Any advice on resolving this would be appreciated.
Thanks.
A
Aeonfinis
02-04-2016, 09:20 AM #4

Eximo :
Load Line voltage droop is quite normal. The BIOS should include a Load Line Calibration option, which compensates for the droop caused by load changes.
If you're not seeing crashes, it probably isn't a major issue.
The problem I'm facing is actually crashes—tried Counterstrike Source 1080p at 4.2ghz with identical settings and still experienced crashes.
Any advice on resolving this would be appreciated.
Thanks.

L
Lucarionite18
Junior Member
44
02-04-2016, 02:58 PM
#5
Some notes.
Vin or Vinput or CPU Voltage should be around 1.6-1.8 volts. This is the voltage coming from the motherboard VRMs to the CPU VRMs. 12V down to 1.8 volts for the CPU core voltage, and other internal CPU voltages. Raising this can increase heat on the motherboard, but it’s needed for higher overclocks. Try adjusting a bit and observe the results.
You already know about the Vcore.
LLC can significantly improve stability with minimal changes.
Monitoring CPU thermals is important. They should stay below 80°C during regular use; if they exceed this, cooling improvements or lowering the Vcore (possibly slowing the clock) are likely needed.
There are many overclocking guides available—check them out.
http://www.overclock.net/t/1570313/skyla...statistics
That one mentions a higher CPU voltage, but I’d need more research to confirm. (The goal is usually maximum speed and longevity, not just short-term performance)
L
Lucarionite18
02-04-2016, 02:58 PM #5

Some notes.
Vin or Vinput or CPU Voltage should be around 1.6-1.8 volts. This is the voltage coming from the motherboard VRMs to the CPU VRMs. 12V down to 1.8 volts for the CPU core voltage, and other internal CPU voltages. Raising this can increase heat on the motherboard, but it’s needed for higher overclocks. Try adjusting a bit and observe the results.
You already know about the Vcore.
LLC can significantly improve stability with minimal changes.
Monitoring CPU thermals is important. They should stay below 80°C during regular use; if they exceed this, cooling improvements or lowering the Vcore (possibly slowing the clock) are likely needed.
There are many overclocking guides available—check them out.
http://www.overclock.net/t/1570313/skyla...statistics
That one mentions a higher CPU voltage, but I’d need more research to confirm. (The goal is usually maximum speed and longevity, not just short-term performance)

H
Hawkywaky
Junior Member
3
02-05-2016, 11:09 PM
#6
You must locate the Load Line Calibration option in your BIOS and adjust it to either the maximum or the second-largest value. Eximo provided the information, but didn't explain how to apply it. Your board features seven levels of LLC, and you've configured it to level six.
H
Hawkywaky
02-05-2016, 11:09 PM #6

You must locate the Load Line Calibration option in your BIOS and adjust it to either the maximum or the second-largest value. Eximo provided the information, but didn't explain how to apply it. Your board features seven levels of LLC, and you've configured it to level six.

T
Tuetme
Senior Member
418
02-06-2016, 06:03 AM
#7
I discovered level 1, the simplest, to be enough for me, though it depends on the CPU and configurations.
T
Tuetme
02-06-2016, 06:03 AM #7

I discovered level 1, the simplest, to be enough for me, though it depends on the CPU and configurations.

P
puffypuffle100
Junior Member
16
02-08-2016, 01:31 AM
#8
I formed my suggestion based on the fact that the previous three boards required the second-highest levels to avoid droop.
P
puffypuffle100
02-08-2016, 01:31 AM #8

I formed my suggestion based on the fact that the previous three boards required the second-highest levels to avoid droop.

T
ThaBear
Member
224
02-10-2016, 09:33 AM
#9
You should boost your Vcore slightly and see if it works better. Check your current stock bios—1.25 is suitable for Skylake. You're running at 4.6ghz with 1.29V, using an LLC. It might be crashing because the overclock demands more power. Give it another try and run a few more cycles until stability returns.
T
ThaBear
02-10-2016, 09:33 AM #9

You should boost your Vcore slightly and see if it works better. Check your current stock bios—1.25 is suitable for Skylake. You're running at 4.6ghz with 1.29V, using an LLC. It might be crashing because the overclock demands more power. Give it another try and run a few more cycles until stability returns.

X
xAPPLExPIEx
Senior Member
657
02-28-2016, 08:20 AM
#10
Thank you for the guidance, the team is checking if the current configurations hold up. I'm not too concerned about temperatures since my highest reading in the past hour was 61°C. Appreciate your help once more.
X
xAPPLExPIEx
02-28-2016, 08:20 AM #10

Thank you for the guidance, the team is checking if the current configurations hold up. I'm not too concerned about temperatures since my highest reading in the past hour was 61°C. Appreciate your help once more.