F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Ryzen 1600x crash at 70°

Ryzen 1600x crash at 70°

Ryzen 1600x crash at 70°

Pages (2): 1 2 Next
I
iasdd177
Member
136
03-20-2017, 02:22 AM
#1
Hey everyone, I'm facing some issues with my OC on the Ryzen 1600x. It's running smoothly below 70° at 4.0 with auto voltage (it crashes at 1.375 in BIOS, so voltage is around 1.38) and the LLC remains set to auto. My XMP profile is active at 2933 MHz for the Corsair Vengeance LX RAM, which has been stable at normal speeds.

I'm not sure why it shuts off at 70°. I think the problem might be with the OC stability at those temperatures—Ryzen can be finicky. Here are my specs:
- Ryzen 1600x 4.0 OC @1.38V
- Aorus X370 Gaming 5
- Corsair Vengeance LX RAM at 2933 MHz
- EVGA Supernova 750W Gold
- 2 RX 480 CF

Any advice or help would be really appreciated. I'm starting to feel a bit frustrated.
I
iasdd177
03-20-2017, 02:22 AM #1

Hey everyone, I'm facing some issues with my OC on the Ryzen 1600x. It's running smoothly below 70° at 4.0 with auto voltage (it crashes at 1.375 in BIOS, so voltage is around 1.38) and the LLC remains set to auto. My XMP profile is active at 2933 MHz for the Corsair Vengeance LX RAM, which has been stable at normal speeds.

I'm not sure why it shuts off at 70°. I think the problem might be with the OC stability at those temperatures—Ryzen can be finicky. Here are my specs:
- Ryzen 1600x 4.0 OC @1.38V
- Aorus X370 Gaming 5
- Corsair Vengeance LX RAM at 2933 MHz
- EVGA Supernova 750W Gold
- 2 RX 480 CF

Any advice or help would be really appreciated. I'm starting to feel a bit frustrated.

J
jpenney7
Member
168
03-20-2017, 03:15 AM
#2
This appears to be a concern about needing a BIOS update for the motherboard. Are you checking if your system uses version F6?
J
jpenney7
03-20-2017, 03:15 AM #2

This appears to be a concern about needing a BIOS update for the motherboard. Are you checking if your system uses version F6?

K
Kroxxx567
Member
51
03-20-2017, 04:43 AM
#3
Adjust the RAM to 2133 and check if the crashes cease. Then revert it back and switch the CPU to stock to determine which setting causes the problem.
K
Kroxxx567
03-20-2017, 04:43 AM #3

Adjust the RAM to 2133 and check if the crashes cease. Then revert it back and switch the CPU to stock to determine which setting causes the problem.

C
Cuballende
Junior Member
7
03-20-2017, 09:09 AM
#4
Adjust the RAM to 2133 and observe if the crashes stop. Then revert the RAM setting and set the CPU to stock to check for further issues. Determine which change is responsible for the problem.
C
Cuballende
03-20-2017, 09:09 AM #4

Adjust the RAM to 2133 and observe if the crashes stop. Then revert the RAM setting and set the CPU to stock to check for further issues. Determine which change is responsible for the problem.

K
KasieKat
Member
188
03-20-2017, 02:15 PM
#5
You might need to restrict your overclock to 3.975, though some videos show them reaching 4.075—check if any adjustments were made.
K
KasieKat
03-20-2017, 02:15 PM #5

You might need to restrict your overclock to 3.975, though some videos show them reaching 4.075—check if any adjustments were made.

J
JBgames_jurne
Junior Member
20
03-25-2017, 05:41 PM
#6
I'll review the steps from the video once more. I'm really hoping my problem is about memory compatibility. If I can't get this running smoothly, I'll just switch to a 1600x and gaming 5 board instead and opt for a model with better OC support.
J
JBgames_jurne
03-25-2017, 05:41 PM #6

I'll review the steps from the video once more. I'm really hoping my problem is about memory compatibility. If I can't get this running smoothly, I'll just switch to a 1600x and gaming 5 board instead and opt for a model with better OC support.

B
Bogieful
Junior Member
47
04-11-2017, 11:25 AM
#7
A few receive 4.075Ghz simply by chance. Others manage it by adjusting the RAM voltage to 1.4v. I've noticed sometimes lower voltages like 1.35v can also trigger an overclock. It might be that the VRM is struggling a bit more in those cases.
B
Bogieful
04-11-2017, 11:25 AM #7

A few receive 4.075Ghz simply by chance. Others manage it by adjusting the RAM voltage to 1.4v. I've noticed sometimes lower voltages like 1.35v can also trigger an overclock. It might be that the VRM is struggling a bit more in those cases.

S
Slow_Burn351
Member
78
04-11-2017, 12:43 PM
#8
Some achieve 4.075Ghz by chance. Others succeed by adjusting RAM voltage to 1.4v. Occasionally, lower voltages like 1.35v enable overclocking. VRM might struggle more in these cases. I'll try it. What's the worst outcome? The biggest confusion is that disabling the CPU core voltage causes crashes, yet it locks at 1.38v.
S
Slow_Burn351
04-11-2017, 12:43 PM #8

Some achieve 4.075Ghz by chance. Others succeed by adjusting RAM voltage to 1.4v. Occasionally, lower voltages like 1.35v enable overclocking. VRM might struggle more in these cases. I'll try it. What's the worst outcome? The biggest confusion is that disabling the CPU core voltage causes crashes, yet it locks at 1.38v.

D
189
04-13-2017, 05:56 PM
#9
This appears to be a concern about needing a BIOS update for the motherboard. Are you checking if your system uses version F6?
D
DoctorSergio15
04-13-2017, 05:56 PM #9

This appears to be a concern about needing a BIOS update for the motherboard. Are you checking if your system uses version F6?

S
saukeuchiuchi
Senior Member
621
04-13-2017, 07:08 PM
#10
This seems to be a problem that might require a BIOS update. Are you using a motherboard with version F6?
S
saukeuchiuchi
04-13-2017, 07:08 PM #10

This seems to be a problem that might require a BIOS update. Are you using a motherboard with version F6?

Pages (2): 1 2 Next