F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Max R5 2600 with air cooler installed.

Max R5 2600 with air cooler installed.

Max R5 2600 with air cooler installed.

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Hotdog321
Member
68
01-20-2018, 10:12 PM
#1
Curious about the maximum operating capacity of the R5 2600. I'm checking how far it can go and whether it can reach similar performance levels as the R5 2600X with its turbo boost.
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Hotdog321
01-20-2018, 10:12 PM #1

Curious about the maximum operating capacity of the R5 2600. I'm checking how far it can go and whether it can reach similar performance levels as the R5 2600X with its turbo boost.

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TBNRfragskenny
Junior Member
3
01-21-2018, 04:07 AM
#2
With the stock cooler on the 2600 (wraith stealth), I believe 4ghz is roughly the best you can achieve. The built-in cooler is decent relative to Intel, though it remains quite compact. Adding a quality aftermarket air cooler would push the target closer to 4.2. The challenge with aligning the 4.25ghz clock of the 2600x lies in the fact that only one core runs at that frequency. Therefore, if you push all cores, stability might drop at higher speeds. This is why, for gaming, AMD CPUs tend to lose some speed when overclocked since most titles benefit more from single-thread performance than from multiple cores.
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TBNRfragskenny
01-21-2018, 04:07 AM #2

With the stock cooler on the 2600 (wraith stealth), I believe 4ghz is roughly the best you can achieve. The built-in cooler is decent relative to Intel, though it remains quite compact. Adding a quality aftermarket air cooler would push the target closer to 4.2. The challenge with aligning the 4.25ghz clock of the 2600x lies in the fact that only one core runs at that frequency. Therefore, if you push all cores, stability might drop at higher speeds. This is why, for gaming, AMD CPUs tend to lose some speed when overclocked since most titles benefit more from single-thread performance than from multiple cores.

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MineArqueiro
Member
237
01-21-2018, 05:21 AM
#3
It might vary based on the cooler, the CPU's performance, airflow within the case, and room temperature. To some degree, the motherboard also plays a role. You'll need to test it out.
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MineArqueiro
01-21-2018, 05:21 AM #3

It might vary based on the cooler, the CPU's performance, airflow within the case, and room temperature. To some degree, the motherboard also plays a role. You'll need to test it out.

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_LeaDaUnicorn
Member
141
01-27-2018, 02:25 PM
#4
With the stock cooler on the 2600 (wraith stealth), I believe 4ghz is roughly the best you can achieve. The built-in cooler is decent relative to Intel, though it remains quite compact. Adding a quality aftermarket air cooler would push the target closer to 4.2. The challenge with aligning the 4.25ghz clock of the 2600x lies in the fact that only one core runs at that frequency. Therefore, if you push all cores, stability might drop at higher speeds. This is why, for gaming, AMD CPUs tend to lose some speed when overclocked since most titles benefit more from single-thread performance than from multiple cores.
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_LeaDaUnicorn
01-27-2018, 02:25 PM #4

With the stock cooler on the 2600 (wraith stealth), I believe 4ghz is roughly the best you can achieve. The built-in cooler is decent relative to Intel, though it remains quite compact. Adding a quality aftermarket air cooler would push the target closer to 4.2. The challenge with aligning the 4.25ghz clock of the 2600x lies in the fact that only one core runs at that frequency. Therefore, if you push all cores, stability might drop at higher speeds. This is why, for gaming, AMD CPUs tend to lose some speed when overclocked since most titles benefit more from single-thread performance than from multiple cores.

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urukhei
Junior Member
36
01-28-2018, 01:06 AM
#5
I believe a 4.0 across all cores would be acceptable with the stock cooler. You likely won't reach 4.25 even with strong cooling.
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urukhei
01-28-2018, 01:06 AM #5

I believe a 4.0 across all cores would be acceptable with the stock cooler. You likely won't reach 4.25 even with strong cooling.