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Overclocking i5 2500k limits

Overclocking i5 2500k limits

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TheJKLM
Member
110
04-23-2016, 06:03 AM
#1
I have an i5 2500k with clock speeds of 3.30hz and 3.60hz, paired with a GTX 1050ti, 8gb ram, and an old GA-Z68X-UD3H-B3 motherboard. I need to know how to overclock this setup and what the maximum limit is.
T
TheJKLM
04-23-2016, 06:03 AM #1

I have an i5 2500k with clock speeds of 3.30hz and 3.60hz, paired with a GTX 1050ti, 8gb ram, and an old GA-Z68X-UD3H-B3 motherboard. I need to know how to overclock this setup and what the maximum limit is.

S
SSaitama
Junior Member
14
04-27-2016, 02:53 AM
#2
Doesn't mention much. The Corsair H60 (a 120mm single fan aio) performs almost identically to a $30 CoolerMaster Hyper212 evo. This means you can expect around 4.2-4.4GHz OC. Your current cooler on the PC is a 280mm nzxt Kraken X61 with twin 140mm fans. It will maintain your i7-3770K at 4.9GHz during stress tests across all eight threads while staying under 74°C. A noticeable gap exists—big airflow supports higher overclocks, while smaller airflow limits them. However, this still depends on other factors discussed earlier.
My wife's machine runs an i5-3570k, which stays steady at 4.3GHz even at low voltages and remains stable. It won't hold a steady 4.4GHz, especially when the cooler is added, maximum CPU voltages applied, and the board is pushed to its limits. The CPU will cap at 4.3GHz. That's essentially the outcome of silicon performance. My i7 (so...
S
SSaitama
04-27-2016, 02:53 AM #2

Doesn't mention much. The Corsair H60 (a 120mm single fan aio) performs almost identically to a $30 CoolerMaster Hyper212 evo. This means you can expect around 4.2-4.4GHz OC. Your current cooler on the PC is a 280mm nzxt Kraken X61 with twin 140mm fans. It will maintain your i7-3770K at 4.9GHz during stress tests across all eight threads while staying under 74°C. A noticeable gap exists—big airflow supports higher overclocks, while smaller airflow limits them. However, this still depends on other factors discussed earlier.
My wife's machine runs an i5-3570k, which stays steady at 4.3GHz even at low voltages and remains stable. It won't hold a steady 4.4GHz, especially when the cooler is added, maximum CPU voltages applied, and the board is pushed to its limits. The CPU will cap at 4.3GHz. That's essentially the outcome of silicon performance. My i7 (so...

P
pyrote
Senior Member
407
05-01-2016, 04:48 PM
#3
Overclocking a CPU involves a complex process that can take a significant amount of time to fully understand. It's recommended to search for information online repeatedly and thoroughly. Each CPU has unique characteristics, leading to varying performance limits, often referred to as the CPU lottery. If cooling isn't a concern, you might achieve speeds around 5GHz or even lower without stability issues. The actual overclocking limits depend on several elements such as CPU lottery, cooling efficiency, ambient temperature, power supply, airflow, your expertise in overclocking, motherboard specifications, and RAM. Therefore, providing a precise figure is challenging.
P
pyrote
05-01-2016, 04:48 PM #3

Overclocking a CPU involves a complex process that can take a significant amount of time to fully understand. It's recommended to search for information online repeatedly and thoroughly. Each CPU has unique characteristics, leading to varying performance limits, often referred to as the CPU lottery. If cooling isn't a concern, you might achieve speeds around 5GHz or even lower without stability issues. The actual overclocking limits depend on several elements such as CPU lottery, cooling efficiency, ambient temperature, power supply, airflow, your expertise in overclocking, motherboard specifications, and RAM. Therefore, providing a precise figure is challenging.

M
60
05-02-2016, 02:05 PM
#4
Overclocking that cpu is a complex topic, it can easily take up an entire page, making it hard to give a simple response. I recommend you search online repeatedly and read everything related to that cpu and its components. Each cpu behaves differently, so limits vary widely—it's often called the CPU lottery. If cooling isn't a concern, you might reach around 5GHz or even lower without losing stability. The OC limits depend on several elements: CPU lottery, cooling efficiency, room temperature, power supply, airflow, your experience with overclocking, motherboard, RAM, and more. A precise number can't be given definitively.
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MrColby_Cheese
05-02-2016, 02:05 PM #4

Overclocking that cpu is a complex topic, it can easily take up an entire page, making it hard to give a simple response. I recommend you search online repeatedly and read everything related to that cpu and its components. Each cpu behaves differently, so limits vary widely—it's often called the CPU lottery. If cooling isn't a concern, you might reach around 5GHz or even lower without losing stability. The OC limits depend on several elements: CPU lottery, cooling efficiency, room temperature, power supply, airflow, your experience with overclocking, motherboard, RAM, and more. A precise number can't be given definitively.

M
Monawar
Member
108
05-02-2016, 06:17 PM
#5
Doesn't say anything. The Corsair H60 (a 120mm single fan aio) gets almost exactly the same performance as a $30 CoolerMaster Hyper212 evo. With that you'll be looking at a good 4.2-4.4GHz OC. My cooler on my pc is a 280mm nzxt Kraken X61, twin 140mm fans. It'll keep my i7-3770K at 4.9GHz with stress test on all 8 threads under 74°C. Considerable difference. Big aio = big possible OC, little aio = little possible OC. But that still depends on the rest of the stuff mentioned.
My wife's pc is an i5-3570k. It gets 4.3GHz all day at low voltages and totally stable. Will not be stable at 4.4GHz,tried it on my mobo, with my cooler, maxed out cpu voltages, everything. Cpu will not go over 4.3GHz. That's called the silicon lottery. My i7 (so far has hit 4.9GHz) is a much better binned cpu.
M
Monawar
05-02-2016, 06:17 PM #5

Doesn't say anything. The Corsair H60 (a 120mm single fan aio) gets almost exactly the same performance as a $30 CoolerMaster Hyper212 evo. With that you'll be looking at a good 4.2-4.4GHz OC. My cooler on my pc is a 280mm nzxt Kraken X61, twin 140mm fans. It'll keep my i7-3770K at 4.9GHz with stress test on all 8 threads under 74°C. Considerable difference. Big aio = big possible OC, little aio = little possible OC. But that still depends on the rest of the stuff mentioned.
My wife's pc is an i5-3570k. It gets 4.3GHz all day at low voltages and totally stable. Will not be stable at 4.4GHz,tried it on my mobo, with my cooler, maxed out cpu voltages, everything. Cpu will not go over 4.3GHz. That's called the silicon lottery. My i7 (so far has hit 4.9GHz) is a much better binned cpu.