F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Question OC 2400g featuring 212 black edition

Question OC 2400g featuring 212 black edition

Question OC 2400g featuring 212 black edition

M
MasterCluTcHeZ
Junior Member
6
07-15-2025, 07:16 PM
#1
I received a fresh cooler, adjusted the APU frequency to the lowest setting and set the CPU to 3.9. The idle temperature is 28°C, and during maximum gaming it reaches 60°C. How much more performance can I achieve with this cooler?
M
MasterCluTcHeZ
07-15-2025, 07:16 PM #1

I received a fresh cooler, adjusted the APU frequency to the lowest setting and set the CPU to 3.9. The idle temperature is 28°C, and during maximum gaming it reaches 60°C. How much more performance can I achieve with this cooler?

T
TxCommand
Member
169
07-16-2025, 02:18 AM
#2
as far as the cpu can go
T
TxCommand
07-16-2025, 02:18 AM #2

as far as the cpu can go

G
gamb1no
Member
226
07-20-2025, 05:37 PM
#3
4,1ghz performed well, 28c idle max reaches 60c during games, but at 4,3ghz it caused a black screen. I'm using 1,45v.
G
gamb1no
07-20-2025, 05:37 PM #3

4,1ghz performed well, 28c idle max reaches 60c during games, but at 4,3ghz it caused a black screen. I'm using 1,45v.

J
Jeffrey_12
Junior Member
13
07-27-2025, 05:18 AM
#4
60c is a bit too high for gaming load temperatures, even if it's not the maximum possible. For a full stress test, 59-60c would be more appropriate since you rarely push your system that hard during regular games, helping avoid exceeding 65c. I understand Ryzen's cores handle heat better than many others, but it's still quite warm.
J
Jeffrey_12
07-27-2025, 05:18 AM #4

60c is a bit too high for gaming load temperatures, even if it's not the maximum possible. For a full stress test, 59-60c would be more appropriate since you rarely push your system that hard during regular games, helping avoid exceeding 65c. I understand Ryzen's cores handle heat better than many others, but it's still quite warm.

C
202
07-27-2025, 06:45 AM
#5
Reset your system to factory default configurations, adjust RAM speeds, and then study how to optimize a Ryzen CPU as much as possible. The principles remain consistent regardless of the manufacturer—whether it's Gigabyte, ASUS, or ASRock, the core concepts stay the same. Setting random GHz values and merely increasing vcore to match a specific model isn't proper optimization; it’s ineffective. Research thoroughly, view tutorials, ask questions, search for bios details, explore how settings interact, and test changes carefully until you understand the distinctions between VID and vcore, which programs display results, which are suitable for stability testing, and the correct sequence for long-term use.
C
Creeper_Face34
07-27-2025, 06:45 AM #5

Reset your system to factory default configurations, adjust RAM speeds, and then study how to optimize a Ryzen CPU as much as possible. The principles remain consistent regardless of the manufacturer—whether it's Gigabyte, ASUS, or ASRock, the core concepts stay the same. Setting random GHz values and merely increasing vcore to match a specific model isn't proper optimization; it’s ineffective. Research thoroughly, view tutorials, ask questions, search for bios details, explore how settings interact, and test changes carefully until you understand the distinctions between VID and vcore, which programs display results, which are suitable for stability testing, and the correct sequence for long-term use.