F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Overclocking i5 4690k causes overheating problems.

Overclocking i5 4690k causes overheating problems.

Overclocking i5 4690k causes overheating problems.

S
ScoutandMilo
Member
71
01-10-2016, 05:56 PM
#1
Hi,
I'm attempting to overclock an i5 4690k using an ASUS Z97-A motherboard. I'm using the Corsair H60 2018 AIO with the standard thermal paste. When running default settings or the XMP profile at 3.9ghz, the CPU stays around 35°C and reaches a maximum of 59°C under Prime95. That's acceptable given the room temperature here. If I try to push it to 4ghz or higher (targeting 4.4ghz), the idle temperature remains steady at 35°C, but Prime95 causes it to jump to 100°C and then throttle. This also occurs during gaming, where temperatures sometimes reach 100°C before dropping back to 60-70°C.

I'm following the same steps as in the video you linked:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ERLk7Qus-A&t=215s
I'm not very experienced with this process.

My setup includes a Fractal Design Meshify C motherboard, two 120 fans front-mounted and an AIO exhaust at the back. I also have an ASUS GTX 1060 STRIX and 16GB of 1866 DDR3 RAM from Crucial.
S
ScoutandMilo
01-10-2016, 05:56 PM #1

Hi,
I'm attempting to overclock an i5 4690k using an ASUS Z97-A motherboard. I'm using the Corsair H60 2018 AIO with the standard thermal paste. When running default settings or the XMP profile at 3.9ghz, the CPU stays around 35°C and reaches a maximum of 59°C under Prime95. That's acceptable given the room temperature here. If I try to push it to 4ghz or higher (targeting 4.4ghz), the idle temperature remains steady at 35°C, but Prime95 causes it to jump to 100°C and then throttle. This also occurs during gaming, where temperatures sometimes reach 100°C before dropping back to 60-70°C.

I'm following the same steps as in the video you linked:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ERLk7Qus-A&t=215s
I'm not very experienced with this process.

My setup includes a Fractal Design Meshify C motherboard, two 120 fans front-mounted and an AIO exhaust at the back. I also have an ASUS GTX 1060 STRIX and 16GB of 1866 DDR3 RAM from Crucial.

J
Jacoby_23
Junior Member
48
01-11-2016, 02:49 AM
#2
Your voltages could be excessive, especially at 4Ghz+. The voltage you're applying seems to be too high, and any minor rise in voltage combined with significant temperature spikes indicates you may have exceeded safe limits.
J
Jacoby_23
01-11-2016, 02:49 AM #2

Your voltages could be excessive, especially at 4Ghz+. The voltage you're applying seems to be too high, and any minor rise in voltage combined with significant temperature spikes indicates you may have exceeded safe limits.

M
MatiasNielsen
Junior Member
20
01-12-2016, 06:20 AM
#3
Your voltages could be excessive, especially at 4Ghz+. The voltage you're applying seems to be too high, and any minor rise in voltage combined with significant temperature spikes indicates you exceeded the safe limits.
M
MatiasNielsen
01-12-2016, 06:20 AM #3

Your voltages could be excessive, especially at 4Ghz+. The voltage you're applying seems to be too high, and any minor rise in voltage combined with significant temperature spikes indicates you exceeded the safe limits.

G
ghostrider05
Junior Member
2
01-12-2016, 02:07 PM
#4
rodrigo.cordova :
Your voltages could be too high, what voltage are you using at 4Ghz+? A slight rise in voltage and a massive temperature spike suggest you pushed it beyond safe limits. I began at 1.175v, which also caused these issues. (I posted the original question from an incorrect account; this is my post) I also think my two 120mm intake fans aren't delivering enough airflow (using the standard fractal design fans that came with the case), so I'm upgrading to Corsair ML140 fans today. I plan to reinstall the CPU and cooler, and replace the default thermal paste with Noctua Thermal Paste.
G
ghostrider05
01-12-2016, 02:07 PM #4

rodrigo.cordova :
Your voltages could be too high, what voltage are you using at 4Ghz+? A slight rise in voltage and a massive temperature spike suggest you pushed it beyond safe limits. I began at 1.175v, which also caused these issues. (I posted the original question from an incorrect account; this is my post) I also think my two 120mm intake fans aren't delivering enough airflow (using the standard fractal design fans that came with the case), so I'm upgrading to Corsair ML140 fans today. I plan to reinstall the CPU and cooler, and replace the default thermal paste with Noctua Thermal Paste.

S
sniperboy650
Senior Member
735
01-12-2016, 08:51 PM
#5
Currently, the side of the case should be removed to allow proper airflow, and you're checking if the AIO is effectively drawing in cool air.
S
sniperboy650
01-12-2016, 08:51 PM #5

Currently, the side of the case should be removed to allow proper airflow, and you're checking if the AIO is effectively drawing in cool air.