F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Overclock i5 6600K to 4.2Ghz

Overclock i5 6600K to 4.2Ghz

Overclock i5 6600K to 4.2Ghz

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evanbretan
Junior Member
29
02-08-2016, 10:00 PM
#1
Hi all,
This is my initial attempt at overclocking and I'm facing freezing issues. I set the multiplier to 42, voltage remains at 1.125V. Is my Vcore adequate for a 4.2Ghz frequency? After powering on, it freezes briefly after roughly one minute without stress testing. Any suggestions?

Here are my specifications:
Intel i5 6600k Skylake
Gigabyte G1 Gaming gtx960
8gb DDR4 @2133mHz
Krait gaming z170
H110i gtx
E
evanbretan
02-08-2016, 10:00 PM #1

Hi all,
This is my initial attempt at overclocking and I'm facing freezing issues. I set the multiplier to 42, voltage remains at 1.125V. Is my Vcore adequate for a 4.2Ghz frequency? After powering on, it freezes briefly after roughly one minute without stress testing. Any suggestions?

Here are my specifications:
Intel i5 6600k Skylake
Gigabyte G1 Gaming gtx960
8gb DDR4 @2133mHz
Krait gaming z170
H110i gtx

I
InoueAlice
Senior Member
677
02-09-2016, 05:05 AM
#2
Don't jump the multi straight to 42. Begin with smaller steps. Lower the turbo and start at 39, then test. Proceed to 40, continue this pattern. If it becomes unstable or fails to boot, increase voltage just a bit at a time and try again until stable. Once steady, raise the multi further and repeat the process. Monitor temperatures constantly, especially after adjusting voltage.
I
InoueAlice
02-09-2016, 05:05 AM #2

Don't jump the multi straight to 42. Begin with smaller steps. Lower the turbo and start at 39, then test. Proceed to 40, continue this pattern. If it becomes unstable or fails to boot, increase voltage just a bit at a time and try again until stable. Once steady, raise the multi further and repeat the process. Monitor temperatures constantly, especially after adjusting voltage.

S
ShadyKoalla
Member
57
02-13-2016, 09:47 AM
#3
Don't jump the multi straight to 42. Begin with smaller steps. Lower the turbo and start at 39, then boot and test. Proceed to 40, continue this pattern, and so on... If it becomes unstable or fails to boot, increase the voltage just a bit at a time and try again until it stabilizes. Once stable, raise the multi once more and repeat the process. Monitor temperatures constantly, especially after adjusting the voltage.

It's important to do some research on overclocking and fully understand the process before trying it. Overclocking can be enjoyable for beginners, but it's not quick. Properly doing it requires patience—stress-testing with tools like Prime95 is essential. Expect real performance improvements from overclocking; a better option would be an i5 6500 with GTX970 for the same budget if you're aiming for higher FPS.
S
ShadyKoalla
02-13-2016, 09:47 AM #3

Don't jump the multi straight to 42. Begin with smaller steps. Lower the turbo and start at 39, then boot and test. Proceed to 40, continue this pattern, and so on... If it becomes unstable or fails to boot, increase the voltage just a bit at a time and try again until it stabilizes. Once stable, raise the multi once more and repeat the process. Monitor temperatures constantly, especially after adjusting the voltage.

It's important to do some research on overclocking and fully understand the process before trying it. Overclocking can be enjoyable for beginners, but it's not quick. Properly doing it requires patience—stress-testing with tools like Prime95 is essential. Expect real performance improvements from overclocking; a better option would be an i5 6500 with GTX970 for the same budget if you're aiming for higher FPS.

Z
Zu_mino
Junior Member
39
02-13-2016, 10:40 AM
#4
It depends on your specific CPU, but aiming for 42 could involve adjusting the CPU voltage by +0.10 and testing stability. If that works, run a few benchmarks like the Asus RealBench BM and proceed from there.
Z
Zu_mino
02-13-2016, 10:40 AM #4

It depends on your specific CPU, but aiming for 42 could involve adjusting the CPU voltage by +0.10 and testing stability. If that works, run a few benchmarks like the Asus RealBench BM and proceed from there.