Only by increasing voltage can you destroy things, but it requires excessive power.
Only by increasing voltage can you destroy things, but it requires excessive power.
He pushed his components beyond safe limits, which likely caused the system to fail. Even without adjusting the voltage, going too far can damage hardware.
Based on my observations, adjusting settings can lead to unusual issues on motherboards that persist even after resetting the CMOS. For instance, my setup experienced coil whine after an improper RAM overclock (voltage was correct, but timing conflicts caused the problem).
The system seems to have trouble with memory. 1500X has a rather strict memory controller. Just wait for it to start up again. My B450M-A and 1200 follow the same pattern. Corsair Vengeance LED 3000Mt/s 15-17-17 works best. In the best case I received from them was CL11-13-13 at 1.35v, part number CMU16GX4M2C3000C15R. Happy performance.
Lol. I hope that's what I expected. The board also would reset unexpectedly with OC on several different setups I attempted. In fact, the problem actually worsened the more I tried to move forward. This happened recently for a competition on our team site. The fix was using my high-frequency B-Die, and the system stabilized again. Overall, the overall experience improved despite the memory controller being rated low frequency. I was aware of this beforehand, as I knew about it during the competition. The IC quality definitely plays a big role.
Everyone experienced strange and surprising results after attempting RAM overclocking: I struggled to get the system up, heard coil whine, and the computer restarted itself while boosting RAM speed. From now on, I’ll avoid adjusting RAM timings on my main machine, opting instead to modify frequency and voltage for a simpler solution.
System has restarted multiple times due to Corsair Vengence problems on this forum. Power Kernel 41 issues are common. Stability drops when using it with SK Hynix memory modules. With AMD, performance remains poor. Even in QVL using factory BIOS, I can't find consistent results. Sometimes I adjust timings to improve benchmarks or beat others, but promoting this is risky. We need more people focused on competitive benchmarking—gaming is one area, but cooling tech like Dry Ice and LN2 is another.