F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Relationship between TDP and cpu voltage

Relationship between TDP and cpu voltage

Relationship between TDP and cpu voltage

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Xandariellol
Member
65
11-06-2016, 08:41 PM
#1
The motherboard can only handle up to 95 watt TDP. (Asrock n68c-gs fx) With a 95w CPU, increasing the voltage might risk damaging the board or SMT.
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Xandariellol
11-06-2016, 08:41 PM #1

The motherboard can only handle up to 95 watt TDP. (Asrock n68c-gs fx) With a 95w CPU, increasing the voltage might risk damaging the board or SMT.

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SKizZ_Fire
Junior Member
12
11-14-2016, 01:00 PM
#2
the asrock n68c is a budget model and was never designed for high-end overclocking, using stock voltages on a mobile case like this can lead to throttling and possible damage to the motherboard.
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SKizZ_Fire
11-14-2016, 01:00 PM #2

the asrock n68c is a budget model and was never designed for high-end overclocking, using stock voltages on a mobile case like this can lead to throttling and possible damage to the motherboard.

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Niall001
Member
170
11-14-2016, 08:45 PM
#3
lifespill :
The asrock n68c is a budget model and was never designed for high overclocking, so raising the voltage on a mobile case like this can lead to throttling and even harm the case. I installed a dual-core AMD board with that case for a year at 1.4 volts. My FX 4100 is currently running at 4 GHz, and it's been a month—so I don't see any issues. It's not that low.
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Niall001
11-14-2016, 08:45 PM #3

lifespill :
The asrock n68c is a budget model and was never designed for high overclocking, so raising the voltage on a mobile case like this can lead to throttling and even harm the case. I installed a dual-core AMD board with that case for a year at 1.4 volts. My FX 4100 is currently running at 4 GHz, and it's been a month—so I don't see any issues. It's not that low.