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Overclocking 9600k

Overclocking 9600k

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DylanDeej
Junior Member
5
01-24-2018, 10:21 AM
#1
Hi,
When you increase your 9600k to around 4.9GHz, there might be a method to keep it at the base clock during idle periods and only boost to 4.9 when necessary. This approach could help preserve its lifespan instead of keeping it constantly at a higher frequency.
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DylanDeej
01-24-2018, 10:21 AM #1

Hi,
When you increase your 9600k to around 4.9GHz, there might be a method to keep it at the base clock during idle periods and only boost to 4.9 when necessary. This approach could help preserve its lifespan instead of keeping it constantly at a higher frequency.

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NikoFoo
Junior Member
39
01-24-2018, 02:08 PM
#2
If you keep speedstep enabled in the BIOS and use the Windows power profile, I'm confident it would function properly.
However, this might reduce the overall benefit of customizing your CPU. To be precise, you'll notice minimal variation between a standard boost of 4.6 and a full core overclock of 4.9. Certain tasks may improve slightly (like synthetic tests), but most performance gains are limited. In games, this would only result in a few frames per second, depending on the title. Your current chip is already among the fastest gamers available.
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NikoFoo
01-24-2018, 02:08 PM #2

If you keep speedstep enabled in the BIOS and use the Windows power profile, I'm confident it would function properly.
However, this might reduce the overall benefit of customizing your CPU. To be precise, you'll notice minimal variation between a standard boost of 4.6 and a full core overclock of 4.9. Certain tasks may improve slightly (like synthetic tests), but most performance gains are limited. In games, this would only result in a few frames per second, depending on the title. Your current chip is already among the fastest gamers available.

M
morgame45
Junior Member
11
01-29-2018, 05:00 PM
#3
If you keep speedstep enabled in the BIOS and use the Windows power profile, I'm confident it would function properly.
However, this might reduce the overall benefit of customizing your CPU. To be precise, you'll notice minimal variation between a standard boost of 4.6 and a full core overclock of 4.9. Certain tasks may improve slightly (like synthetic tests), but most performance gains are limited. In games, this would only result in a few frames per second, depending on the game. Your current chip is already among the fastest gamers available.
M
morgame45
01-29-2018, 05:00 PM #3

If you keep speedstep enabled in the BIOS and use the Windows power profile, I'm confident it would function properly.
However, this might reduce the overall benefit of customizing your CPU. To be precise, you'll notice minimal variation between a standard boost of 4.6 and a full core overclock of 4.9. Certain tasks may improve slightly (like synthetic tests), but most performance gains are limited. In games, this would only result in a few frames per second, depending on the game. Your current chip is already among the fastest gamers available.

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The_Aquablade5
Junior Member
17
01-29-2018, 09:58 PM
#4
Cheers, appreciate it!
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The_Aquablade5
01-29-2018, 09:58 PM #4

Cheers, appreciate it!