F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Need assistance with your FX 8370 and R7 370 OCing?

Need assistance with your FX 8370 and R7 370 OCing?

Need assistance with your FX 8370 and R7 370 OCing?

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CounterStrikeZ
Junior Member
23
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM
#1
So I recently acquired an FX 8370 (new and affordable), since my previous AM3 board with a Phenom II x6 1055T was struggling. Initially, I managed a stable overclock at 4.5 Ghz on the FX 8370, and on my Sapphire R7 370 2GB (core: 0.995-1.1Ghz, memory: 1.4-1.5 Ghz) for around two weeks without any issues. However, I began to notice performance drops during several games. I then lowered both the CPU and GPU back to their stock speeds and ran some benchmarks; the results looked normal. Later, I tried overclocking the CPU again at 4.5 Ghz with the same settings and voltages, but it wasn’t stable. I decided to revert it to stock and tested my GPU. I overclocked the GPU up to 1.1 and 1.5 and ran a benchmark—its scores were lower than before. Am I underpowered? I’m using a 700 W power supply (not the best, but it should work: https://www.inter-tech.de/en/products/psu/atx/sl-700). If the overclock on both components worked smoothly for two weeks without problems, with stable temperatures and no crashes, increasing FPS was noticeable. Could this be a power issue? I’m using a Gigabyte 970A-DSP3 with Corsiar DDR3 2x4 GB at 1600 Mhz, a Kingston SSD 240 GB, and a Toshiba HDD 500 GB.
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CounterStrikeZ
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM #1

So I recently acquired an FX 8370 (new and affordable), since my previous AM3 board with a Phenom II x6 1055T was struggling. Initially, I managed a stable overclock at 4.5 Ghz on the FX 8370, and on my Sapphire R7 370 2GB (core: 0.995-1.1Ghz, memory: 1.4-1.5 Ghz) for around two weeks without any issues. However, I began to notice performance drops during several games. I then lowered both the CPU and GPU back to their stock speeds and ran some benchmarks; the results looked normal. Later, I tried overclocking the CPU again at 4.5 Ghz with the same settings and voltages, but it wasn’t stable. I decided to revert it to stock and tested my GPU. I overclocked the GPU up to 1.1 and 1.5 and ran a benchmark—its scores were lower than before. Am I underpowered? I’m using a 700 W power supply (not the best, but it should work: https://www.inter-tech.de/en/products/psu/atx/sl-700). If the overclock on both components worked smoothly for two weeks without problems, with stable temperatures and no crashes, increasing FPS was noticeable. Could this be a power issue? I’m using a Gigabyte 970A-DSP3 with Corsiar DDR3 2x4 GB at 1600 Mhz, a Kingston SSD 240 GB, and a Toshiba HDD 500 GB.

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Randmfrogman
Member
116
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM
#2
VRM is what I need to be concerned about, CF has no relation to it.
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Randmfrogman
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM #2

VRM is what I need to be concerned about, CF has no relation to it.

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Dragon9youtube
Junior Member
5
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM
#3
That MB is holding you back, just not OC material for FX 8xxx processors.
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Dragon9youtube
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM #3

That MB is holding you back, just not OC material for FX 8xxx processors.

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KS_Poison
Junior Member
3
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM
#4
CountryMike shared his thoughts on the issue, noting the limitation and suggesting the 2.x version with crossfire support instead of 1.0.
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KS_Poison
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM #4

CountryMike shared his thoughts on the issue, noting the limitation and suggesting the 2.x version with crossfire support instead of 1.0.

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Miss_PandaCat
Junior Member
17
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM
#5
VRM is what I need to focus on, CF has no connection to it.
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Miss_PandaCat
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM #5

VRM is what I need to focus on, CF has no connection to it.

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DatBoii
Member
144
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM
#6
CountMike replied that VRM is the main concern and CF is unrelated. He clarified that crossfire is also not connected to it, just to confirm the model. He also offered to check the voltage regulator and thanked the responder.
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DatBoii
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM #6

CountMike replied that VRM is the main concern and CF is unrelated. He clarified that crossfire is also not connected to it, just to confirm the model. He also offered to check the voltage regulator and thanked the responder.

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kohiplays
Member
155
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM
#7
VRM operating at 4.5GHz would exceed 140W. Adding a fan or other cooling solution could significantly improve performance.
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kohiplays
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM #7

VRM operating at 4.5GHz would exceed 140W. Adding a fan or other cooling solution could significantly improve performance.

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piganometry
Member
63
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM
#8
CountMike confirmed the issue at 4.5GHz would exceed 140W, suggesting adding a fan or active cooling could help. He mentioned considering it and noted his setup already has four fans, which seems to work well. He plans to investigate VRM cooling further. Thanks again.
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piganometry
11-28-2024, 08:04 PM #8

CountMike confirmed the issue at 4.5GHz would exceed 140W, suggesting adding a fan or active cooling could help. He mentioned considering it and noted his setup already has four fans, which seems to work well. He plans to investigate VRM cooling further. Thanks again.