F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Question about Haswell i5 temperature

Question about Haswell i5 temperature

Question about Haswell i5 temperature

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SGT_Smith
Junior Member
5
11-22-2016, 11:37 AM
#1
BIOS settings adjusted for my i5 4670k at 4.2 volts. It seems stable so far. This was my initial overclock attempt, and I've been using it for two days without any throttling. Performance remains strong during games, and temperatures stayed within normal ranges. After about 30 minutes in AIDA64, the peak reached 86°C, with an average of 74-78°C. Everything appears to be functioning well.
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SGT_Smith
11-22-2016, 11:37 AM #1

BIOS settings adjusted for my i5 4670k at 4.2 volts. It seems stable so far. This was my initial overclock attempt, and I've been using it for two days without any throttling. Performance remains strong during games, and temperatures stayed within normal ranges. After about 30 minutes in AIDA64, the peak reached 86°C, with an average of 74-78°C. Everything appears to be functioning well.

G
GodZenik
Member
242
11-24-2016, 03:20 AM
#2
Hammad5161 shared that their PC restarted during a game session without BSOD, and today they experienced a BSOD while playing Battlefield 1 ("we're just collecting info and restarting for you"). The CPU wasn't throttling, and temperatures stayed below 75°C for both CPU and GPU, as monitored via Rivatuner. Changing the voltage from 1.225 to 1.235 seems sufficient. Increasing by 0.01v might not be enough for such high clock speeds. It's recommended to adjust the voltage in small increments until stability is achieved or temperatures rise further.
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GodZenik
11-24-2016, 03:20 AM #2

Hammad5161 shared that their PC restarted during a game session without BSOD, and today they experienced a BSOD while playing Battlefield 1 ("we're just collecting info and restarting for you"). The CPU wasn't throttling, and temperatures stayed below 75°C for both CPU and GPU, as monitored via Rivatuner. Changing the voltage from 1.225 to 1.235 seems sufficient. Increasing by 0.01v might not be enough for such high clock speeds. It's recommended to adjust the voltage in small increments until stability is achieved or temperatures rise further.

P
ProLikeAlexTV
Junior Member
35
11-24-2016, 04:14 AM
#3
Your temps are fine.
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ProLikeAlexTV
11-24-2016, 04:14 AM #3

Your temps are fine.

B
BloomingIris
Member
177
12-13-2016, 08:33 PM
#4
Yes, you might want to consider it. At that temperature range, 4.4ghz could be suitable for the game.
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BloomingIris
12-13-2016, 08:33 PM #4

Yes, you might want to consider it. At that temperature range, 4.4ghz could be suitable for the game.

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JohnHeks
Junior Member
6
12-21-2016, 04:01 PM
#5
For continuous use I wouldn't go much higher... 86°C is still fine (though it's a bit high) but even higher temperatures aren't ideal... For me, I prefer to keep the CPU at its MAX of 80°C during a Prime95 Stresstest...
This helps me ensure my CPU stays cool and comfortable while gaming, so I don't have to worry about overheating.
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JohnHeks
12-21-2016, 04:01 PM #5

For continuous use I wouldn't go much higher... 86°C is still fine (though it's a bit high) but even higher temperatures aren't ideal... For me, I prefer to keep the CPU at its MAX of 80°C during a Prime95 Stresstest...
This helps me ensure my CPU stays cool and comfortable while gaming, so I don't have to worry about overheating.

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UltraBoss123
Junior Member
32
12-26-2016, 10:06 AM
#6
Thanks! Should I consider using 4.4ghz? The game runs at half hour with temperatures around 65-70 degrees. Try it and check the readings. If your temps during stress tests stay above 80C, you might need to lower the overclock or upgrade your cooler.
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UltraBoss123
12-26-2016, 10:06 AM #6

Thanks! Should I consider using 4.4ghz? The game runs at half hour with temperatures around 65-70 degrees. Try it and check the readings. If your temps during stress tests stay above 80C, you might need to lower the overclock or upgrade your cooler.

D
DevilDoggy657
Senior Member
530
12-26-2016, 03:41 PM
#7
my pc restarted yesterday while playing arma without a crash, and today battlefield 1 had a BSOD ("we're just collecting info and restarting for you"). The cpu wasn't throttling, and temperatures stayed under 75°c for both cpu and gpu, which i track using rivatuner. I adjusted the voltage from 1.225 to 1.235—was that sufficient?
D
DevilDoggy657
12-26-2016, 03:41 PM #7

my pc restarted yesterday while playing arma without a crash, and today battlefield 1 had a BSOD ("we're just collecting info and restarting for you"). The cpu wasn't throttling, and temperatures stayed under 75°c for both cpu and gpu, which i track using rivatuner. I adjusted the voltage from 1.225 to 1.235—was that sufficient?

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SuperScout345
Member
217
12-27-2016, 12:29 AM
#8
Hey, just let me know what needs adjusting after you added the picture, thanks.
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SuperScout345
12-27-2016, 12:29 AM #8

Hey, just let me know what needs adjusting after you added the picture, thanks.

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davidamo08
Junior Member
1
01-04-2017, 09:00 PM
#9
Hammad5161 shared that their PC restarted during a game session without BSOD, and today they experienced a BSOD while playing Battlefield 1 ("we're just collecting info and restarting for you"). The CPU wasn't throttling, and temperatures stayed below 75°C for both CPU and GPU, as monitored via Rivatuner. Changing the voltage from 1.225 to 1.235 seems sufficient. Increasing by 0.01v might not be enough for such high clock speeds. It's recommended to adjust the voltage in small increments until stability is achieved or temperatures rise further.
D
davidamo08
01-04-2017, 09:00 PM #9

Hammad5161 shared that their PC restarted during a game session without BSOD, and today they experienced a BSOD while playing Battlefield 1 ("we're just collecting info and restarting for you"). The CPU wasn't throttling, and temperatures stayed below 75°C for both CPU and GPU, as monitored via Rivatuner. Changing the voltage from 1.225 to 1.235 seems sufficient. Increasing by 0.01v might not be enough for such high clock speeds. It's recommended to adjust the voltage in small increments until stability is achieved or temperatures rise further.