F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking R53600 on b450 4.2ghz

R53600 on b450 4.2ghz

R53600 on b450 4.2ghz

C
csige791
Posting Freak
818
08-31-2019, 08:40 PM
#1
Is it possible to OC 3600 on ASUS ROG STRIX B450-E GAMING with H100i platinum RGB, what will be the voltage and will it run stable. Am not talking about the silicon present in it and i will be lucky to push it beyond or not. Am talking about normal r5 3600 what will be the stable clock speed and on what voltage . Have royal 3000mhz 8*2 will be also overclocking it.
Its a new pc am afraid because my mobo doesnt have that good of vrams so i just want to know from pro. what will be the consequence and so on.
Help me
C
csige791
08-31-2019, 08:40 PM #1

Is it possible to OC 3600 on ASUS ROG STRIX B450-E GAMING with H100i platinum RGB, what will be the voltage and will it run stable. Am not talking about the silicon present in it and i will be lucky to push it beyond or not. Am talking about normal r5 3600 what will be the stable clock speed and on what voltage . Have royal 3000mhz 8*2 will be also overclocking it.
Its a new pc am afraid because my mobo doesnt have that good of vrams so i just want to know from pro. what will be the consequence and so on.
Help me

F
Fenitis
Member
196
08-31-2019, 09:53 PM
#2
There's low risk overclocking RAM, it mostly just will not boot if settings are wrong. You could use a program like this
https://www.techpowerup.com/download/ryz...alculator/
to help you do it manually but if for instance you are able to get it to 3200Mhz but with higher CL, you will not get any better performance.
F
Fenitis
08-31-2019, 09:53 PM #2

There's low risk overclocking RAM, it mostly just will not boot if settings are wrong. You could use a program like this
https://www.techpowerup.com/download/ryz...alculator/
to help you do it manually but if for instance you are able to get it to 3200Mhz but with higher CL, you will not get any better performance.

C
CrazyBessyCat
Posting Freak
912
09-02-2019, 06:13 AM
#3
Welcome to the forums, my friend! In general, there isn't a single correct answer. The best approach is to adjust the settings yourself and see how they perform. What works for you might not work for someone else. You'll find a helpful guide here for testing on the 3600: Improved VRMs tend to give better voltage control during overclocking, which often leads to improved stability.
C
CrazyBessyCat
09-02-2019, 06:13 AM #3

Welcome to the forums, my friend! In general, there isn't a single correct answer. The best approach is to adjust the settings yourself and see how they perform. What works for you might not work for someone else. You'll find a helpful guide here for testing on the 3600: Improved VRMs tend to give better voltage control during overclocking, which often leads to improved stability.

S
StyleTrick
Senior Member
744
09-03-2019, 07:00 PM
#4
It's only about finding the average stable clock speed.
S
StyleTrick
09-03-2019, 07:00 PM #4

It's only about finding the average stable clock speed.

J
JaxMaster25
Junior Member
40
09-03-2019, 10:41 PM
#5
It's quite unique, even someone with the same setup cannot reveal what your system might do.
For Ryzen 2nd and 3rd generation models, the general guideline is that the maximum stable overclock matches the automatic boost frequency across all cores. In many scenarios, automatic boost can deliver better performance for single-core or threaded tasks since it can raise higher single cores, whereas overclocking all cores would require more power and voltage. This could lead to increased heat and potential instability, possibly resulting in reduced performance.
You may achieve around 4.2GHz with a voltage of about 1.425V, but you'll need a cooler capable of managing the heat.
J
JaxMaster25
09-03-2019, 10:41 PM #5

It's quite unique, even someone with the same setup cannot reveal what your system might do.
For Ryzen 2nd and 3rd generation models, the general guideline is that the maximum stable overclock matches the automatic boost frequency across all cores. In many scenarios, automatic boost can deliver better performance for single-core or threaded tasks since it can raise higher single cores, whereas overclocking all cores would require more power and voltage. This could lead to increased heat and potential instability, possibly resulting in reduced performance.
You may achieve around 4.2GHz with a voltage of about 1.425V, but you'll need a cooler capable of managing the heat.

G
gizmoe101
Member
61
09-11-2019, 12:33 AM
#6
overclocking the ram module might help in some cases but could also shorten its lifespan.
G
gizmoe101
09-11-2019, 12:33 AM #6

overclocking the ram module might help in some cases but could also shorten its lifespan.

K
Kolarhome
Junior Member
3
09-11-2019, 02:22 AM
#7
There's low risk overclocking RAM, it mostly just will not boot if settings are wrong. You could use a program like this
https://www.techpowerup.com/download/ryz...alculator/
to help you do it manually but if for instance you are able to get it to 3200Mhz but with higher CL, you will not get any better performance.
K
Kolarhome
09-11-2019, 02:22 AM #7

There's low risk overclocking RAM, it mostly just will not boot if settings are wrong. You could use a program like this
https://www.techpowerup.com/download/ryz...alculator/
to help you do it manually but if for instance you are able to get it to 3200Mhz but with higher CL, you will not get any better performance.