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Overclock lost following CMOS reset

Overclock lost following CMOS reset

S
stromer2000
Junior Member
4
02-22-2026, 08:34 PM
#1
Hi,
I lost my overclock profile after clearing the CMOS. I read a post from last year suggesting vrim was 1.8v, vcore 1.102, and multiplier 42. Would it be safe to use those values, perhaps adjusting the multiplier to 40 since stability wasn't consistent even when it worked? Thanks.
S
stromer2000
02-22-2026, 08:34 PM #1

Hi,
I lost my overclock profile after clearing the CMOS. I read a post from last year suggesting vrim was 1.8v, vcore 1.102, and multiplier 42. Would it be safe to use those values, perhaps adjusting the multiplier to 40 since stability wasn't consistent even when it worked? Thanks.

_
_unknown___
Member
134
02-22-2026, 09:04 PM
#2
Reverting CMOS restores the board's BIOS to its original settings, erasing any changes unless you saved the BIOS profile to a USB drive first. The appropriate safe voltage depends on your system specifications, which seems quite sensible.
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_unknown___
02-22-2026, 09:04 PM #2

Reverting CMOS restores the board's BIOS to its original settings, erasing any changes unless you saved the BIOS profile to a USB drive first. The appropriate safe voltage depends on your system specifications, which seems quite sensible.

I
114
02-24-2026, 03:34 AM
#3
Reverting CMOS restores the board's BIOS to its original settings, erasing any changes unless you saved the BIOS profile to a USB drive first. The appropriate safe voltage depends on your system specifications, which seems quite sensible.
I
ItsVintageBeef
02-24-2026, 03:34 AM #3

Reverting CMOS restores the board's BIOS to its original settings, erasing any changes unless you saved the BIOS profile to a USB drive first. The appropriate safe voltage depends on your system specifications, which seems quite sensible.

J
jjjoanna
Junior Member
8
02-25-2026, 04:17 AM
#4
Test your old o/c settings, adjust stress and lower multiplier's/voltage until it stabilizes.
Don't forget to configure your RAM as it will require changes.
J
jjjoanna
02-25-2026, 04:17 AM #4

Test your old o/c settings, adjust stress and lower multiplier's/voltage until it stabilizes.
Don't forget to configure your RAM as it will require changes.

J
Jerryx01
Posting Freak
870
02-26-2026, 08:11 PM
#5
Ram was listed on xmp profile 1, which was all the data I had about my oc
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Jerryx01
02-26-2026, 08:11 PM #5

Ram was listed on xmp profile 1, which was all the data I had about my oc