F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Overclocking Motherboard Guide

Overclocking Motherboard Guide

Overclocking Motherboard Guide

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StyleTrick
Senior Member
744
01-21-2020, 09:08 AM
#1
Can the Asus ROG B450-F support overclocking to 5600x or 5800x? please let me know.
S
StyleTrick
01-21-2020, 09:08 AM #1

Can the Asus ROG B450-F support overclocking to 5600x or 5800x? please let me know.

Z
zMadeus
Posting Freak
755
01-22-2020, 01:14 AM
#2
The Asus ROG boards support up to a 5950x without problems, the VRM design is more than sufficient for that. With a Ryzen processor, overclocking offers little advantage, as AMD already provides strong performance on these CPUs with minimal room for improvement. It's more effective to lower the CPU voltage, achieving better temperatures and improved boosts, which enhances performance compared to simply increasing the multiplier like it would with Intel.

The main distinction among the B450, x470, B550 and x570 motherboards lies in the use of PCIe 4.0 or not, as well as the RAM specifications. When using NVIDIA and Gen3 SATA/NVMe storage with 3200MHz RAM, the differences are minimal except for some minor changes in USB ports.
Z
zMadeus
01-22-2020, 01:14 AM #2

The Asus ROG boards support up to a 5950x without problems, the VRM design is more than sufficient for that. With a Ryzen processor, overclocking offers little advantage, as AMD already provides strong performance on these CPUs with minimal room for improvement. It's more effective to lower the CPU voltage, achieving better temperatures and improved boosts, which enhances performance compared to simply increasing the multiplier like it would with Intel.

The main distinction among the B450, x470, B550 and x570 motherboards lies in the use of PCIe 4.0 or not, as well as the RAM specifications. When using NVIDIA and Gen3 SATA/NVMe storage with 3200MHz RAM, the differences are minimal except for some minor changes in USB ports.

C
creeperkava16
Member
64
01-22-2020, 02:11 AM
#3
It works well with the 5600x even with a slight overclock. The 5800x performs better on an x570 platform.
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creeperkava16
01-22-2020, 02:11 AM #3

It works well with the 5600x even with a slight overclock. The 5800x performs better on an x570 platform.

V
V4L3N73
Member
209
01-22-2020, 08:21 AM
#4
The Asus ROG boards support up to a 5950x without problems, the VRM design is more than sufficient for that. With a Ryzen processor, overclocking offers little advantage, as AMD already provides strong performance on these CPUs with minimal room for improvement. It's more effective to lower the CPU voltage, achieving better temperatures and improved boosts, which enhances performance compared to simply increasing the multiplier like it would with Intel.

The main distinction among the B450, x470, B550 and x570 motherboards lies in the use of PCIe 4.0 or not, as well as the RAM specifications. When using NVIDIA and Gen3 SATA/NVMe storage with 3200MHz RAM, the differences are minimal except for some minor changes in USB ports.
V
V4L3N73
01-22-2020, 08:21 AM #4

The Asus ROG boards support up to a 5950x without problems, the VRM design is more than sufficient for that. With a Ryzen processor, overclocking offers little advantage, as AMD already provides strong performance on these CPUs with minimal room for improvement. It's more effective to lower the CPU voltage, achieving better temperatures and improved boosts, which enhances performance compared to simply increasing the multiplier like it would with Intel.

The main distinction among the B450, x470, B550 and x570 motherboards lies in the use of PCIe 4.0 or not, as well as the RAM specifications. When using NVIDIA and Gen3 SATA/NVMe storage with 3200MHz RAM, the differences are minimal except for some minor changes in USB ports.

T
Thesnake9
Member
160
01-22-2020, 05:21 PM
#5
How much OC is available for the 5600X? I'm wondering if I'm missing out by not using it.
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Thesnake9
01-22-2020, 05:21 PM #5

How much OC is available for the 5600X? I'm wondering if I'm missing out by not using it.

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RulwenJr
Posting Freak
786
01-25-2020, 07:23 AM
#6
I'm a bit confused about what you're referring to, especially since I'm still getting familiar with these motherboard topics. It seems like the AMD performance isn't fully realized unless you overclock it. Right now, I'm using a Ryzen 2600x with medium overclocking, and the temperatures are decent—around 39-45°C when idle, and 50-62°C during gaming and rendering.
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RulwenJr
01-25-2020, 07:23 AM #6

I'm a bit confused about what you're referring to, especially since I'm still getting familiar with these motherboard topics. It seems like the AMD performance isn't fully realized unless you overclock it. Right now, I'm using a Ryzen 2600x with medium overclocking, and the temperatures are decent—around 39-45°C when idle, and 50-62°C during gaming and rendering.

J
81
01-26-2020, 10:59 PM
#7
I'm not sure about the B450, but on the X570 the 5xxx auto step or auto overclock is quite high when temperatures are good. Some tech YouTube channels, like gamers nexus, showed that there weren't any real benefits from manually overclocking and it could even hurt performance. View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kcr8mSBX...TechProfis
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jamesmader1993
01-26-2020, 10:59 PM #7

I'm not sure about the B450, but on the X570 the 5xxx auto step or auto overclock is quite high when temperatures are good. Some tech YouTube channels, like gamers nexus, showed that there weren't any real benefits from manually overclocking and it could even hurt performance. View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kcr8mSBX...TechProfis

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tortadi
Member
156
01-28-2020, 03:40 AM
#8
Everyone claims to switch on PBO and finish. Many upgrades actually reduce single-core speed, which isn't ideal for gaming. If you're frequently using your CPU for workstation work, then a multi-core boost might be better.
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tortadi
01-28-2020, 03:40 AM #8

Everyone claims to switch on PBO and finish. Many upgrades actually reduce single-core speed, which isn't ideal for gaming. If you're frequently using your CPU for workstation work, then a multi-core boost might be better.

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Hamdrew
Junior Member
9
01-28-2020, 04:39 AM
#9
I just think 3.7ghz isn't good enough for me, huh?
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Hamdrew
01-28-2020, 04:39 AM #9

I just think 3.7ghz isn't good enough for me, huh?

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DangoBravo
Posting Freak
821
01-28-2020, 01:09 PM
#10
You're unlikely to encounter a 3.7Ghz base clock unless you're pushing the system to its maximum capacity. Typically, the stock boost clock runs at 4.6Ghz, meaning most games will operate between 4.4 and 4.6Ghz.
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DangoBravo
01-28-2020, 01:09 PM #10

You're unlikely to encounter a 3.7Ghz base clock unless you're pushing the system to its maximum capacity. Typically, the stock boost clock runs at 4.6Ghz, meaning most games will operate between 4.4 and 4.6Ghz.

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