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Lost Overclock 3570k

Lost Overclock 3570k

H
Hidekih
Posting Freak
849
02-25-2016, 06:49 PM
#1
Hi All
I had an i5 3570k OC at 4.7Ghz (1.395V) with delidded, coolaboratory ultra liquid between lid and die, and between lid and heatsink. I used an Arctic Freezer 13, a Gigabyte Z68XP-UD3P motherboard. The usual temperatures were 65-70°C max at full CPU load. It's been running this setup for about four years. Suddenly, my overclock stopped working. The PC started showing a green screen of death on Windows Insider, and I couldn't boot to a usable screen. I only noticed the issue when I saw the CPU temperature reaching 81°C. After adjusting the clocks, it stabilized at 51°C with the CPU running at 34% and 3.4Ghz. I can't even reach 3.5Ghz without getting the green screen again. It's possible this is related to electromigration, but I didn't suspect the ultra liquid dried up. The PC wasn't moved or disturbed when this began.
Thanks
Igor
H
Hidekih
02-25-2016, 06:49 PM #1

Hi All
I had an i5 3570k OC at 4.7Ghz (1.395V) with delidded, coolaboratory ultra liquid between lid and die, and between lid and heatsink. I used an Arctic Freezer 13, a Gigabyte Z68XP-UD3P motherboard. The usual temperatures were 65-70°C max at full CPU load. It's been running this setup for about four years. Suddenly, my overclock stopped working. The PC started showing a green screen of death on Windows Insider, and I couldn't boot to a usable screen. I only noticed the issue when I saw the CPU temperature reaching 81°C. After adjusting the clocks, it stabilized at 51°C with the CPU running at 34% and 3.4Ghz. I can't even reach 3.5Ghz without getting the green screen again. It's possible this is related to electromigration, but I didn't suspect the ultra liquid dried up. The PC wasn't moved or disturbed when this began.
Thanks
Igor

P
75
02-25-2016, 07:33 PM
#2
It's not about electromigration. This won't cause you to lose your entire overclock. Instead, you'll see a slow decrease—like from 4.6ghz to 4.5, then 4.4. It's a gradual process, not a sudden jump. Make sure your BIOS is current and consider using a non-beta version of Windows.
P
PeruckeTuch332
02-25-2016, 07:33 PM #2

It's not about electromigration. This won't cause you to lose your entire overclock. Instead, you'll see a slow decrease—like from 4.6ghz to 4.5, then 4.4. It's a gradual process, not a sudden jump. Make sure your BIOS is current and consider using a non-beta version of Windows.